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They may be measuring different areas like the differential as the lowest point?
Bob
Bob
Lost in the world said:What you are describing is the breakover angle,
...
Also, your drawing seems to show the vans having 20" tires, but a "1 ton" van typically has 245/75r16 tires, which are approx. 30.5 inches tall.
Lost in the world said:The wheel is typically 16", which is what the r16 at the end of the tire size I mentioned represents.
Lost in the world said:If I had to guess, I'd say that stuff hangs down about 2" below the center of the wheel, so with 30.5" tires that makes it approx 13.25" off the ground. That gives the 135" WB van a 11.1 degree breakover angle, and the 155" WB van a 9.7 degree breakover angle.
Bster13 said:I appreciate the technical discussion (love the participation in this forum) as I learn something new every day. But is there a ground clearance or vehicle type (any old cargo van of various lengths, or "that RAV4 Hybrid will get er' done.") that you can put the "you'll be fine" stamp of approval on for most of the roads out West that you fulltimers travel on? My goal is to make it to most places a tribe would hang out at for a few days, not necessarily the most remote place in the lower 48 for solitude.
ArtW said:.... and FWD platforms tend to be more breakable and less modifiable than RWD platforms
ArtW said:so the older RAV has better ground clearance, and will be cheaper, win win! still seems cramped, though
Also, on a FWD car, there is no need to replace tires in pairs unless you have a limited slip differential (most FWD cars don't) NO car with open differentials requires replacing tires as 'sets' that I know of, just those with limited slips and lockers (which probably means all AWDs)
I'm quite sure the guy at the tire shop will disagree, he makes his living selling tires
That doesn't mean it's not a good idea, but unless you have an LSD, it's not necessary
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