So... I have been meaning to ask, and I bet the readers of this thread have enough experience to answer...
My question is this: In sand, (not snow) are there really times when getting unstuck isn't as simple as just airing down? I ask because I have yet to encounter sand that I can't get through or out of by just airing down appropriately. Seems like everytime I see someone using sand ladders, it's also pretty obvious that they're not aired down anywhere near what I would consider appropriate. (Look at this thread... Every picture of using sand ladders looks like rock hard tires.)
Last year in Moab, we dropped into a sandy wash with the truck looking for a place to stay off the beaten path. We found a really soft spot that stopped both trucks immediately. My buddy "used a lot of flooring" and was immediately crossed up and stuck. After we unhooked his little camper trailer and aired him down some, he pretty much drove out, then re-hooked to the trailer and dragged it out with little fuss. I kept my foot off the throttle better, and just aired down from 70psi to about 35 and drove right out of my ruts. Mind you this was perhaps 6-8" of dry blow sand. My truck with the camper weighs about 9000lbs, and at the time was on 235/80R17's. I'm sure I could have aired down even more if the conditions warranted it.
I realize that airing back up is sometimes the concern, so are sand ladders mostly to keep you from having to air down, or is there really sand out there that will swallow a rig so well that even really low pressure doesn't cut it?
Not saying you guys should all just air down, I just want to know if ladders are an alternative, or really are needed in some sand conditions where airing down won't cut it.
(I have OBA, so airing down is the first think I do when I venture off pavement anyway.)
Chris
If I'd have had sand laddars, I think they would have worked with some digging to get them far enough under for the tires to bite, but really, what's the point if airing down works? I did have to take it easy back to town, but that's not a big deal to me, and my Jeep has OBA, so I air it down appropriately always.