- Mar 31, 2003
- 11,679
- 0
- 81
Hey Guys,
Yesterday, I was helping a friend with yard work.
He had a VERY large bush of some sort that he wanted removed from the yard. Given that I have a truck:
'95 Toyota Tacoma
2.7L I4
5 speed Manual
159.9K Miles
we figured that we would just attach my tow strap to the front tow hook (Attached with 2x 1/2" bolts to the frame) and just rip it out.
I tried in FWD and the tires (obviously) just spun on the pavement.
I tried in 4-Hi and I almost stalled out.
I tried 3x times in 4-Lo before we managed to get the tree out.
[*]The first time I started started out trying to go in reverse just like driving normally. I, subsequently had the horribly disappointing smell of burnt clutch
[*]The second time and third time, I crept until the rope was taught and then immediately went completely from clutch to gas to avoid burning the clutch up. On the second time, I stalled; however, I prevented this on the 3rd time when I succeeded in ripping it out
On all trials, my friend I was helping, said the front of my truck took an ~8" nosedive as I tried to pull.
My question is, what is the proper way to do something like this in a manual transmission?
How far should/could I have pushed the truck? Generally after a <5 seconds if nothing budged we called it. Could I have moved closer to WOT or tried to sustain the pull?
Given that I didn't have a rear tow hitch, we had to attach to the front hook. If I had both, wouldn't the front hook still be preferable given that reverse is the strongest gear in the car?
Thanks,
-Kevin
Yesterday, I was helping a friend with yard work.
He had a VERY large bush of some sort that he wanted removed from the yard. Given that I have a truck:
'95 Toyota Tacoma
2.7L I4
5 speed Manual
159.9K Miles
we figured that we would just attach my tow strap to the front tow hook (Attached with 2x 1/2" bolts to the frame) and just rip it out.
I tried in FWD and the tires (obviously) just spun on the pavement.
I tried in 4-Hi and I almost stalled out.
I tried 3x times in 4-Lo before we managed to get the tree out.
[*]The first time I started started out trying to go in reverse just like driving normally. I, subsequently had the horribly disappointing smell of burnt clutch
[*]The second time and third time, I crept until the rope was taught and then immediately went completely from clutch to gas to avoid burning the clutch up. On the second time, I stalled; however, I prevented this on the 3rd time when I succeeded in ripping it out
On all trials, my friend I was helping, said the front of my truck took an ~8" nosedive as I tried to pull.
My question is, what is the proper way to do something like this in a manual transmission?
How far should/could I have pushed the truck? Generally after a <5 seconds if nothing budged we called it. Could I have moved closer to WOT or tried to sustain the pull?
Given that I didn't have a rear tow hitch, we had to attach to the front hook. If I had both, wouldn't the front hook still be preferable given that reverse is the strongest gear in the car?
Thanks,
-Kevin
