9500kg
I certainly didn't have time to stop since it was continuously slipping, but it must have been a slower slip than Neils as well as a lot less far to fall. If I had a big drop that side would I have been so quick to turn and drive down it?!?
I did study a bit of geotechnics years ago, if you look up a soil's angle of repose, especially once the soil's particles have been lubricated by rain, then even staying the right side of a guesstimated rule of thumb 45 degree line from base of slope to your wheels might be too tight. Being used to European roads that even if made of soft stuff you can be fairly confident they won't move to then put yourself in that same position in a road that may only have been badly made or re-made that year is a risk I wasn't aware of until it found me.
The road we slipped off from had something like 75 degree steep sides. A bulldozer can push the material out to form that shape, but if whatever is used to compact it went right to that edge it would fall off too. IMHO
Jason
I certainly didn't have time to stop since it was continuously slipping, but it must have been a slower slip than Neils as well as a lot less far to fall. If I had a big drop that side would I have been so quick to turn and drive down it?!?
I did study a bit of geotechnics years ago, if you look up a soil's angle of repose, especially once the soil's particles have been lubricated by rain, then even staying the right side of a guesstimated rule of thumb 45 degree line from base of slope to your wheels might be too tight. Being used to European roads that even if made of soft stuff you can be fairly confident they won't move to then put yourself in that same position in a road that may only have been badly made or re-made that year is a risk I wasn't aware of until it found me.
The road we slipped off from had something like 75 degree steep sides. A bulldozer can push the material out to form that shape, but if whatever is used to compact it went right to that edge it would fall off too. IMHO
Jason