Guinness44
Adventurer
During the Chile Challenge, the portals definitely were an advantage. Diffs on regulars hung up left and right in those extreme trails. Extreme buggies seem to often go that route nowadays. They are hardly expedition vehicles.
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The groundclearance gained on the H1, and the gearreduction, is what makes it the H1, with the lowrpm torque of a diesel. Like the climb to Grey Mesa on the Hole in the Rock trail: Its 7 feet wide, so there is only one line. The couple H2s that were along had some trouble clearing the diffs at that one spot, while the 1s, just went over. Even so the independant suspension is not favored by most, we have learned to drive "all over again". Coming from a TJ, where air under a tire is gonna be a unstable moment....
The groundclearance gained on the H1, and the gearreduction, is what makes it the H1, with the lowrpm torque of a diesel. Like the climb to Grey Mesa on the Hole in the Rock trail: Its 7 feet wide, so there is only one line. The couple H2s that were along had some trouble clearing the diffs at that one spot, while the 1s, just went over. Even so the independant suspension is not favored by most, we have learned to drive "all over again". Coming from a TJ, where air under a tire is gonna be a unstable moment....