NY_Rob
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Rob
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2022
- Threads
- 23
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- 5,400
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- Location
- long island
- Vehicles
- Model 3 LR AWD, BMW i3 REX, 2024 Rubicon 4xe
- Occupation
- IT
^ smart kids! 
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Most likely this weekend. More to followIf you end up doing this I'd love to hear your feedback back. I have 22s also and was planning to do this once I replace the stock tires.
That sand is super soft, we got stuck at the 30, we aired down to about 15 on the 21 pirelleis and it was fine.The Cape Cod National Seashore oversand beach driving notes the psi must be at 11 psi.
Is that safe with my Michelin Defender ltx ms2 lt275 50r22 119/116S “E”? I have a G1 Quad. I was thinking 20 psi would be the lowest.
Sand in different parts of the country can provide wildly different levels of support. And as soon as you have to climb up something, high pressure tires will just spin soft sand instead of rolling across it. Plus, on a coastal beach, you're putting your vehicle at a pretty big risk if you get stuck near the water at low tide.Am I the only one who doesn't air down for sand?
Now sure I don't bother driving on the sand if it appears like there is a good chance of getting stuck and where I go if often populated. It's only about a mile from my house near the Oregon coast.
I go there and eat my lunch and then come home.
Airing down is the first thing I'll do if I do get stuck so its good to know the 31psi minimum (I have all-season defenders). It's also a good idea to have a deflator to make it easier like Staun deflators another poster mentioned. That way it takes less time.
Thank you very mucho for your 411!!I'm a Beach Ranger on Nantucket with essentially the same sand as Cape Cod (same glacier) and we request 12-15. Sadly I drive an F250 all day but when I take my R1T Dual w/21" wheels out I air down to 20. I have pulled 2 R1S's out, one at 30 and one at 40. The Rivian off-road recommendation is not for soft sand.