

I must admit to only reading a few posts on here but the topic to me seems very stupid.
I have a thwates 15 hwt 2wd dumper it will go just about anyware it may not be fast but it has a big bootand lots of fresh air and big tyres.
Bob.
That could just be the nut on the end of the steering that wheel needs fixingI have one of them as well, although I wouldn't describe it as that good for traction
I have lost count of the times I have had to go and get the quad to pull it out.
Neil.![]()

That could just be the nut on the end of the steering that wheel needs fixing
Bob.
I did exactly the same at the beginning of last winter on my wife's Peugeot Expert (incidentally an excellent car/van hybrid) and it was wicked in the snow. Tyres is everything. (Still prefer my hilux though)Thought I'd resurrect this 2wd thread after having had a pair of el cheapo 'mud 'n' snow' tyres fitted to the front end of one of our Berlingo Multispaces. Okay, the previous street Michelins were getting a bit on the worn side, but the difference in traction across the fields is nothing short of amazing. At £53 a pop I'd put them on the other Berlingos for winter running if we could get some, but I guess the current weather conditions have made them as rare as the proverbial rocking horse crap at the moment.
They look a bit too full-on radical for the type of daily use I do. The ones I've managed to get aren't too far away from normal-use tyres but have more tread blocks with extra cuts and slight angularities in them. I presume the compound must be a bit softer and the construction more flexible. A tiny bit noisier at Mway speeds but that's more than compensated for by the extra grip on soft ground.
My only problem on-road is... well y'know... other people...
Which side of the carriageway are we talking? Or is it pedestrians on the path getting in the way?
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