Ronny has done a use case comparison video before a couple years ago or so between Maxtrax and Treds. They did the whole "get it bogged and see how the boards do with getting unstuck" so you can't really be complaining about him not doing that again, even if it's with different boards. As someone else posted a video of others doing comparison tests, there are plenty other videos to watch about it.
But one thing I never really saw anyone do until Ronny's last video was see how much abuse the boards can really take. Yes, we all can agree that a $75 pair of XBulls will probably get you unstuck as well as a $400 pair of Maxtrax, or even Tred Pros. But that's just once, maybe twice. What happens after the 3rd, 4th, 5th, etc? How about after they've been sitting on your roof for a year? Two years? What happens when you're in something really soft and the board is wrapped around your tire? Will it hold up to that?
His video, despite not showing actual recoveries with the boards, showed the difference in durability between the different price points. That was the whole point of it. Even the original Treds didn't do great, and they knew that would happen since they've broken them easily in the past. Truthfully I was kind of surprised at how the Tred Pros did. I know they're priced similar to standard Maxtrax but I wasn't sure how durable they really were. Now I know.
But seeing how the Xbulls and whatever that first couple of garbage sets were ended up cracking fairly easily you can appreciate just why they are so cheap compared to Maxtrax and Tred Pros. It made me glad that I spent the extra money on a pair of Maxtrax last year. I was starting to wonder if I should have just gone the cheaper route and gotten Xbulls since so many are extolling their virtues these days, but now I know I made the right decision. Yes, I know not everyone can afford Maxtrax, and that's fine. But for me I would rather spend the extra money and be done rather than go with a cheaper option that I have to replace again and again.
My rig is an example of that. The Hummer H3's do not take kindly to cheap aftermarket parts, they trash them in very short order. It's true OEM parts or very high quality aftermarket parts only. Yeah, it's a bummer because OEM is not cheap. But it's a solid rig when correct parts are used so it is worth it. I'd rather spend the extra money up front rather than be stuck on the side of a trail 10k miles later because of cheap parts, or have to replace something 4 times over instead of just once.
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