Here's a new winter driving gadget ...
Here's a new winter driving gadget ...
Check this thing out ....
www.shurtrax.com
It's built to be secured in the bed which sure beats sandbags in the back.
PISTOL
www.shurtrax.com
It's built to be secured in the bed which sure beats sandbags in the back.
PISTOL
Registered User
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 233
Likes: 0
From: East Bound and Down Loaded Up and Truckin'
I had a buddy in high school, he had a 82 chevy gasser, he had about 6" of ice built up along with the snow and busted his rear end, he wasn't doing anything crazy either. granted it was only a 10 bolt, but still. i would rather have no weight.
Trending Topics
Proprietor of Fiver's Inn and Hospitality Center
Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 2,506
Likes: 22
From: Sarasota, Florida
And, when you are in the middle of the winter in Brainard, Minnesota with a full and frozen bedbag and need to use the bed to haul some lumber and concrete blocks, you do what?????? Me thinks maybe some concrete blocks or steel weights are the way to go. I can remove them even if they are "frozen".
Could you install the thing underneath the bed?
If I lived within 1000 miles of ice, I would think about installing a tank under the bed where the spare tire is and filling that up with whatever whenever it got freezing...
If I lived within 1000 miles of ice, I would think about installing a tank under the bed where the spare tire is and filling that up with whatever whenever it got freezing...
Originally Posted by berner
Neat idea but...... you can buy a lot of concrete patio blocks for $140. Concrete weighs more than water too. That's why it sinks.
Not Always..........


http://chinadan.com/16albuma/87-004h.html
Originally Posted by berner
Neat idea but...... you can buy a lot of concrete patio blocks for $140. Concrete weighs more than water too. That's why it sinks.
My opinion, put like 300 (or more)lbs back there, 100 sand, 100 small stone, and 100 salt, that way if you get stuck or slide off the road, you can use it to get back on the road. I keep a mix of those three in a bucket for my wife in her car, I told her you get on ice, throw it down, it'll help out a bunch.
I think I’ll stick to the way I’ve handled this in the past. Three plastic drums full of water, that’s approximately 1370lbs. With one strap holding them to the tailgate and another pulling forward in case the tailgate comes open.
Add a set of chains and I can move and stop (just in case you did not know, the stop is the important part) better than a 4X4
Add a set of chains and I can move and stop (just in case you did not know, the stop is the important part) better than a 4X4
Originally Posted by TAS05CTD610
That's what they call displacement. Anything that displaces more weight in water than itself, will float. A brick will sink, but make it into a boat shape and thin (same weight) it'll float.




