Scary 4wd moment
Discussion
Thought you lot might appreciate this one...
You can see faint tracks on the right where I went up (2nd gear low range for perspective, they never look as steep in photos), and not-so-faint track on the left where I came down a lot faster going backwards:

A closer look:

Where I finally managed to reverse out of it (truck is exactly as it stopped), just before it would have got a whole lot worse:

One of the scarier moments I've had in a work vehicle
You can see faint tracks on the right where I went up (2nd gear low range for perspective, they never look as steep in photos), and not-so-faint track on the left where I came down a lot faster going backwards:

A closer look:

Where I finally managed to reverse out of it (truck is exactly as it stopped), just before it would have got a whole lot worse:

One of the scarier moments I've had in a work vehicle


Certainly got the adrenaline going, I can tell you that!
Was going fine until part-way up the steepest bit when it lit up all 4 wheels very suddenly and took off backwards. Probably would have gone up it if the rear tyres had a bit more tread (had come down it 10 min earlier with no problems) but they're well due for replacement (blame my boss for that one!).
There wasn't much more I could have done AFAIK, I grabbed reverse as soon as it lost forwards momentum and tried to slow it gently with engine braking but as you can see once it had started to rip through the grass into the wetter soil underneath there wasn't much grip to do anything - perhaps if I'd accelerated harder earlier once in reverse to get the wheels going faster than the slide then I might have been able to slow it from there, but then again perhaps not and I didn't want to gain any more speed than I had to in order to keep directional control.
I don't have a lot of 'proper' off-road experience, its the first time I've been in that situation (have had to back off climbs before but always more controlled) so any useful advice from more experienced off-roaders would be welcome.
There wasn't much more I could have done AFAIK, I grabbed reverse as soon as it lost forwards momentum and tried to slow it gently with engine braking but as you can see once it had started to rip through the grass into the wetter soil underneath there wasn't much grip to do anything - perhaps if I'd accelerated harder earlier once in reverse to get the wheels going faster than the slide then I might have been able to slow it from there, but then again perhaps not and I didn't want to gain any more speed than I had to in order to keep directional control.
I don't have a lot of 'proper' off-road experience, its the first time I've been in that situation (have had to back off climbs before but always more controlled) so any useful advice from more experienced off-roaders would be welcome.
GravelBen said:
I don't have a lot of 'proper' off-road experience, its the first time I've been in that situation (have had to back off climbs before but always more controlled) so any useful advice from more experienced off-roaders would be welcome.
First mistake was to confuse a open green field with something safe to drive up!! I always get the s
A couple of things that could have helped:
Accelerate- you wouldn't have gained much more speed but you would have picked up some traction which would have given you the ability to steer.
Cadence brake- if you don't have the confidence to accelerate then learn to cadence brake properly- i think you probably could have stopped on that hill with a bit of cadence braking.
One technique that would have worked with the right knowledge (but would have utterly trashed the hillside- and i mean utterly) and if you are really brave/silly then you could have left it in first near the top and booted it to get all 4 wheels spinning- what happens is that you can use the angle of the slope and your steering input to slide sideways across the hill to the lowest point. I DO NOT recommend this tecnhique without a roll cage and a lot of experience- works well with triallers and such like though and could work if you were totally desperate- ie you had a cliff right behind you!
hobbiniho said:
could you not have done a j-turn so you were pointing down the hill the right way, so you could drive to safety????

pugwash4x4 said:
GravelBen said:
I don't have a lot of 'proper' off-road experience, its the first time I've been in that situation (have had to back off climbs before but always more controlled) so any useful advice from more experienced off-roaders would be welcome.
First mistake was to confuse a open green field with something safe to drive up!! I always get the s
pugwash4x4 said:
A couple of things that could have helped:
Accelerate- you wouldn't have gained much more speed but you would have picked up some traction which would have given you the ability to steer.
Accelerate- you wouldn't have gained much more speed but you would have picked up some traction which would have given you the ability to steer.

pugwash4x4 said:
Cadence brake- if you don't have the confidence to accelerate then learn to cadence brake properly- i think you probably could have stopped on that hill with a bit of cadence braking.
I don't think it would have done anything in this case - even a very light touch on the brakes caused it to pick up speed, those big brown marks down the hill were not caused by locked wheels - 98% of the way down I was in reverse and on the throttle.pugwash4x4 said:
One technique that would have worked with the right knowledge (but would have utterly trashed the hillside- and i mean utterly) and if you are really brave/silly then you could have left it in first near the top and booted it to get all 4 wheels spinning- what happens is that you can use the angle of the slope and your steering input to slide sideways across the hill to the lowest point. I DO NOT recommend this tecnhique without a roll cage and a lot of experience- works well with triallers and such like though and could work if you were totally desperate- ie you had a cliff right behind you!
I have seen triallers do this on TV but again I don't think it would have worked there given how quickly it took off backwards once the wheels started to spin.Thanks for the advice, on reflection the biggest single factor was probably the lack of tread on the rear tyres, there were no problems with traction coming down it forwards and it drove out of the slide pretty quickly once the nose was downhill.
Edited by GravelBen on Sunday 15th June 10:31
DennisTheMenace said:
Sorry to go O/T but is that a trimble GPS back pack by the rear of the toyota ??
used them years ago when surveying with fujitsu tablets , 1 job i really miss
Close - we use Leica GPS used them years ago when surveying with fujitsu tablets , 1 job i really miss


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