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Thread: towing camper trailer on sand

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    Tassie/Perth
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    Disagree with not dropping tyre pressures on the trailer. We have a Trak Shak that has been towed over the country into quite a few different areas. Think about walking in soft sand and how your foot sinks into the sand. Now think what would happen if you were to spread that weight out over a bigger footprint - it wouldn't sink in as much.

    It's the same thing with the tyres. It's all good on harder sand but once you hit that real soft stuff your trailer tyres will try and dig in - they won't float over the top of the sand.

    BTW - biggest tip is don't go for tight turns as your trailer tyres turn in a different arc to your vehicle. Try and plan exits etc from the beach so you do a wide arc and hit the soft stuff already with the vehicle and trailer straightened up.

    Cheers
    Chris

  2. #12
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Bracken Ridge - Brisbane - QLD
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    Thanks chris......

    I reckon I will lower the tyre pressures when we leave on Saturday.

    Well I got into our camping ok ish I guess......my first attempt going around a sand dune off camber resulted in me getting stuck although I could back out quite easily. I ended up coming in on the northern side but there was no way I could do a u-turn kept bogging down so we ended up man handling it a we wanted it spun around 180 degrees......

    I don't know how some of the camper and caravan got into where they were set up.....I assume much lower tyre pressures.

    Currently I have 18 in the front and 22 in the rear.......haven't got stuck anywhere yet, plenty other getting stuck

  3. #13
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    Kallangur, Brisbane
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tombie View Post
    You could go lower with tyre pressures...

    A good trick is to measure the footprint of the tyre and adjust to match the tow vehicle...

    Vehicle at 18psi will be much different to trailer at 18psi in a lot of cases..
    My camper trailer weighs much the same & I deflate the tyres to 10psi to match the footprint size of my D2 at 18psi.
    + 2016 D4 TDV6

  4. #14
    Join Date
    Jan 2012
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    Bendigo
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    I'd be letting the tires down more.
    When we were at Fraser last year we were very heavy (even carried a spare diff as I was very suspect of the rear one), trailer weighed about 900kg. We went 16/18/9 - front/back/trailer. Got up and over one particularly hard exit that an empty Delica wasn't able to do; the climb out of Eurong was dead easy on those pressures.

  5. #15
    Join Date
    Jan 2012
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    Bendigo
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    Yes I'd be going lower.
    Fraser last year we were very VERY heavy (even carried a spare diff as I was suspect of the rear one), the trailer was about 900kg

    We were running 16/18/9psi - front/back/trailer. Driving off Eurong beach into the Rocks campsite we were able to do an exit that an empty Delica wasn't able to do.

  6. #16
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Dalby
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    Quote Originally Posted by weeds View Post
    I don't know how some of the camper and caravan got into where they were set up.....I assume much lower tyre pressures.
    I have used winch and snatch block to get a good spot.

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