Yesterday I heard the most plausible explanation yet of 'what happened' from a work colleague who has just moved from the top end of the Northern Territory and had to use a 4wd to get to work each day for half the year during the wet season.
The mud was heavy, but also quite wet and thin on the top. Wide tyres with a large surface area tend to sit on top and just spin. Thin tyres with less surface area place more pressure on the mud which allows them to dig down through it to the harder earth below.
If the mud was too deep the Landy could have gotten stuck as well. If it was a sandy beach the Nissan would have been able to walk over what the Landy would have sunk in, but the Landy could have it's tyres let down to achieve the same surface area (due to the high walls of the tyres).
In any situation thin high walled tyres should be used at maximum pressure and only let down when you are already bogged.
With thin high walled tyres it is possible to have your cake and eat it, with wide tyres they always have a large surface area and in some terrain are a disadvantage. He said this is why the military chooses them. When I said to him that someone on this forum had commented that the military chooses them because they are cheaper he laughed and said "do you really think that the Army or any military force in the world would spend millions on modifying vehicles to cover all terrains then skimp on tyres??, people just put on fat tyres because they look better."
Up until yesterday I had been seriously considering trying out some big widey's, but after hearing this guys confident explanation who claims to have 4wd'n through some of the remotest sections of Australia on thin tyres, I'm going to stick with the thinny's. After all, I can just let them down if I get bogged.


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