F-250 Tows Freight Semi from a Stop.
Watch the video here: F-250 Tows Semi-Truck in Texas
A local news station luckily caught this on tape. It's a great display of torque and grip. Did I mention this was in the snow? Freaking sweet. |
Time to grab the kitty litter........ stupid people. :-blah
On a better note... Im lovin how she ate her words :-drink |
Pretty nice. I see its an older F-250. I just wonder if its a 6oh or a 7.3....?
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Nice. I helped a trucker the same way once, he was stuck on some ice on a dirt/gravel road at a steel mill. Gave him a tug, and drove with him til we got to dry ground. It's not the truck but the jerking action that gets him out. I tried pullin him and couldn't but with a little tug he got movin.
But we can believe it was Ford power that got the job done. |
I remember that day. And here is another video in which my friend was stuck in the same road and got tired of waiting. He is the one on the 86 F250. Put it in gear and left.
Dallas Ice Storm 2011 - YouTube |
Originally Posted by SlickYamaha
(Post 11640886)
Time to grab the kitty litter........ stupid people. :-blah
they needed the kitty litter because they were gettin wet...hehehe On a better note... Im lovin how she ate her words :-drink |
Originally Posted by VR6Nutt
(Post 11641009)
Pretty nice. I see its an older F-250. I just wonder if its a 6oh or a 7.3....?
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was it loaded?
I pulled a semi in a similar situation with my 4x4 EcoBoost F150. The truck was unloaded & towing a flatbed. I wonder if the truck in the video was loaded or empty? It looked heavy.
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We do the same thing all the time in winter. We have all flat beds and often get stuck in our own parking lot. When it snows and then the sun comes out things melt. Then it all refreezes over night. A day cab with an empty flat bed has zero traction from a stop on ice. We just grab a strap and use the company pickup to drag the trucks off the ice. Once we get out of our spots we are good to go.
I also used my own truck to pull a lightly loaded flatbed away from a dock. The dock was full of packed down snow and he couldn't get enough traction to get moving forward. I just wrapped a chain around my hitch and gave him a tug and stayed with it until he was on the road. The problem is with trying to get moving with your weight split across 8 tires. I know on my semi at work I only have about 8,000 lb on my drives when empty with a trailer. At that point there's less weight per drive tire than any pickup. Once you get rolling though you now have the traction of 8 tires to push you instead of just 1 or 2 in a car/pickup. |
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