Wet Sand...
#1
#5
Wet Sand...
It depends on how wet the sand is.
When its really wet, almost hard pack, and when its wet like 1 foot down in the sand, nobbies are the ticket. When its only the top few inches, paddles are the good set up.
As far as hill shooting goes, the wet heavy sand gets churned up in high traffic areas, and its just heavy. It takes more power to displace a heavier mass.
Up the hill in the wet sand, paddles work as well as nobbies.
Stay off the hill on wet days, its jsut works your motor too hard, go bowling! Or find jumps, when its wet the take off stays good for alot longer, before you get pitched sideways!
When its really wet, almost hard pack, and when its wet like 1 foot down in the sand, nobbies are the ticket. When its only the top few inches, paddles are the good set up.
As far as hill shooting goes, the wet heavy sand gets churned up in high traffic areas, and its just heavy. It takes more power to displace a heavier mass.
Up the hill in the wet sand, paddles work as well as nobbies.
Stay off the hill on wet days, its jsut works your motor too hard, go bowling! Or find jumps, when its wet the take off stays good for alot longer, before you get pitched sideways!
#6
Wet Sand...
You get a much better ride on knobbies in the wet sand. I have seen paddles be a disadvantage in wet sand. If the wet sand is only a few inches deep, the paddles cut through and find the loose dry sand, and get stuck. On knobbies they can stay on top of the good-traction wet sand.
#7