Stuck!
Stuck!
Well I was doing a plow job in a remote spot and I buried the W250 in 32" of snow. I don't know what I was thinking.. it won't get stuck!
After about three hours I gave up and went back to snow blowing with the lawn tractor.. It was getting dark so I decided to pack everything up and head home. Truck wouldn't budge... so I really whomped on it and I heard something crunching in the front. Destroyed my locking hub. Any ways, after some cussing and praying I decided to call someone.. with the cold my phone was dead. This happens all the time, I'll warm it up in my arm pit.. hour or so later and a smelly phone.. low battery logo...FU@# No one lives here and I'm in the middle of no where. With a Full tank of diesel in the truck I thought a few things..
If I spend the night here, how long will the 12v idle for on a full tank?
Suppose to get down to -15F and is already -6F there is no way I'm walking 50 miles
What do I do in the morning.
Do I break into their house, I'll never work this job again and it pays well... but
There has got to be a way out, there always is.
I went through my toolbox and sure enough, I found a come a long rated at 10 tons! Hooked it to a tree and uses a ratchet strap and started ratcheting. Truck was moving and all of a sudden the come along broke, gears stripped and I watch the W250 slide back into that god forsaken hole it was in. Anyway.. I was sitting in the truck and I decided to go at it again. I took it really slow and I couldn't believe it, the truck was moving.. as I gain momentum I went faster and I got out... PHEW!
Thought I would share that story.
After about three hours I gave up and went back to snow blowing with the lawn tractor.. It was getting dark so I decided to pack everything up and head home. Truck wouldn't budge... so I really whomped on it and I heard something crunching in the front. Destroyed my locking hub. Any ways, after some cussing and praying I decided to call someone.. with the cold my phone was dead. This happens all the time, I'll warm it up in my arm pit.. hour or so later and a smelly phone.. low battery logo...FU@# No one lives here and I'm in the middle of no where. With a Full tank of diesel in the truck I thought a few things..
If I spend the night here, how long will the 12v idle for on a full tank?
Suppose to get down to -15F and is already -6F there is no way I'm walking 50 miles
What do I do in the morning.
Do I break into their house, I'll never work this job again and it pays well... but
There has got to be a way out, there always is.
I went through my toolbox and sure enough, I found a come a long rated at 10 tons! Hooked it to a tree and uses a ratchet strap and started ratcheting. Truck was moving and all of a sudden the come along broke, gears stripped and I watch the W250 slide back into that god forsaken hole it was in. Anyway.. I was sitting in the truck and I decided to go at it again. I took it really slow and I couldn't believe it, the truck was moving.. as I gain momentum I went faster and I got out... PHEW!
Thought I would share that story.
I would agree with Vern.
If I can drive for about 6 hrs between fill ups easy just trucking down the highway, I bet a Cummins would idle for twice as long.
I would be more worried about CO poisoning than freezing to death myself. When I find myself in that scenario, I fire up the motor for 15/20 minutes and warm up, then turn it off and try to sleep for 30-45 minutes until I wake up shivering. Then I fire up the rig, listen to tunes and "high" idle the motor for another 15 minutes till I warm back up. Then repeat the cycle again.
That is coming from a guy that spent WAY more than his fair share of cold nights in my Dodge trucks. I have done at least two nights camping under my fiberglass camper shell in -25 F, that is an actual temp. without this "windchill" stuff. I did have sleeping bag for those nights though.
In the winter on out of town road trips I try to always bring the sleeping bag, several pairs of gloves, spare socks, some beef jerky / snacks and water.
Glad you made it home safely.
If I can drive for about 6 hrs between fill ups easy just trucking down the highway, I bet a Cummins would idle for twice as long.
I would be more worried about CO poisoning than freezing to death myself. When I find myself in that scenario, I fire up the motor for 15/20 minutes and warm up, then turn it off and try to sleep for 30-45 minutes until I wake up shivering. Then I fire up the rig, listen to tunes and "high" idle the motor for another 15 minutes till I warm back up. Then repeat the cycle again.
That is coming from a guy that spent WAY more than his fair share of cold nights in my Dodge trucks. I have done at least two nights camping under my fiberglass camper shell in -25 F, that is an actual temp. without this "windchill" stuff. I did have sleeping bag for those nights though.
In the winter on out of town road trips I try to always bring the sleeping bag, several pairs of gloves, spare socks, some beef jerky / snacks and water.
Glad you made it home safely.
I plow quite a bit of snow in rural north east wa. and I never go into a spot like that with out chains for all 4 wheels, 1 spare hub and 2 spare u-joints, been there and done that and have the marks to prove it.. lol .. Glad everything came out alright
Trending Topics
I got my old 58 chevy stuck in a mudhole on a dirt road in Kansas when I was a kid. Tried to jack it up to put dirt under the tires and mashed my hand. Then I had to hike a couple of miles to get help. Nothing like being in the middle of nowhere and feeling helpless.
Edwin
Edwin
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Subliminal
1st Gen. Ram - All Topics
18
Oct 24, 2010 11:02 PM
Stovetop535
General Diesel Discussion
22
Jun 9, 2008 02:15 PM











