Wheeling with large groups is a new thing for me, and I have noticed that it seems to make people take more chances than they might otherwise if alone. If you feel like you need a winch, throw the line! Our last trip out there was a guy on portals and 38’s trying to hit a line a conventional bronco with 37’s had successfully done. Just miss after miss after miss. A suggestion was made to hook up a winch as a safety line, but…he didn’t want the shame. That then turned into a roll. Oopsie.Here is a takeaway, applies to me and everyone: Rear locker thought to be on or not, the spotter could see you struggling and hanging up three different ways. He also seemed a little exasperated. When you as driver and owner of the vehicle said “winch”, that should have been it. No sense stressing everyone out plus the Bronco any further.(Side note I was at HF 2 weeks ago and twisted my rear lower shock bracket on a ledge like that, that little place has some challenges!)
At least a real “stop and assess” meeting when he walked around to your side. Get out and look. And also being assertive matters: if winching, switching drivers, or backing off is what’s called out - by the driver, owner, or whoever is timing out for the sake of safety, then speak up.
I think back to that that lengthy video by @popo_patty with a concise breakdown of his recovery event and lessons learned. It hits on all this.
Maybe leave the front at 16 but drop the rear to 12.16 psi. I don’t have beadlocks so didn’t want to chance knocking a tire off a bead. But after watching the video, I could probably lower them down to 12 and get away with it. I don’t know..
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