Okay I will let u know how it goes this weekend. Recommended tire pressure for beach is 20 mine right now is 40 is that gonna be to low?I haven’t in my Ram yet (will be doing so next month) but we’ve driven our Land Cruiser on the soft sand of the OBX beaches quite a few times and I think your tire selection isn’t as important as is adequately airing down to get a bigger contact patch and help you stay “afloat” and not sink down. I just try to take it easy on the accelerator and keep momentum over any rough spots or when climbing up and over the dune line.
Okay thanks!! It’s just gonna me me and my fishing gear and luggage probably no more than 200lbsAgree. Air Down! And then, make sure you Air Down. I pull a 31' 8,000 lbs travel trailer on to the soft sandy ocean beaches of Long Island ever week all summer for the past 5 years as we rent out our house and live on the beach in out trailer July-LD and I can personally tell you tire treads don't matter much on soft sand. It's all about airing down and keeping the momentum. Light on the gas and just let her glide. When pulling I have even aired down the fronts to below 10 PSI due to tongue weight, but the Ram will pull much better than my Avalanche did. Good luck and stay in the tracks!
Agree. Air Down! And then, make sure you Air Down. I pull a 31' 8,000 lbs travel trailer on to the soft sandy ocean beaches of Long Island ever week all summer for the past 5 years as we rent out our house and live on the beach in out trailer July-LD and I can personally tell you tire treads don't matter much on soft sand. It's all about airing down and keeping the momentum. Light on the gas and just let her glide. When pulling I have even aired down the fronts to below 10 PSI due to tongue weight, but the Ram will pull much better than my Avalanche did. Good luck and stay in the tracks!
I agree this is a test run to see if I really do need different tires since I will be surf fishing a lot and will be airing down to 18psi luckily I have an air compressor with meI agree that airing down is the most important thing when on soft sand. As for traction and tread I slightly disagree. After years of desert offroading in So cal, tread does make a difference, along with throttle. Too little throttle will hurt you just as bad as too much. Its all about driving to the terrain conditions. I use to air down to 12psi for the dunes in my Jeep. That was with 33x12.50x15s. Not sure I would trust the tires on my Ram that low.
Word to wise, mind the tides! Grew up driving n the beach in NC and saw several trucks get swallowed by the tide coming in. If you are surf fishing, know when the tide is coming in and be mindful where your truck is parked.
I agree this is a test run to see if I really do need different tires since I will be surf fishing a lot and will be airing down to 18psi luckily I have an air compressor with me
If it's just you serve casting and a little bit of gear your stocktars will be fine. Most daytrippers who go on the beach are all in their stock tires and then you'll have it better driving tires the other 340 days of the year. Yes a better tread would be better but would you really need to spend $1,000 to $2,000 for that small amount of improvement considering your only casually driving on the beach to surf cast absolutely not. Save your money for something else. I'm sure there's plenty of laws and rods and beers you can buy. Have fun and definitely mind the tide.I agree this is a test run to see if I really do need different tires since I will be surf fishing a lot and will be airing down to 18psi luckily I have an air compressor with me
I got stuck almost immediately and had to air down to get out. Thank god I had a shovel with me