Wet Roads, Irish Bridges and Fords - Printable Version +- babyRR.com - The Range Rover Evoque Forum (https://babyrr.com/forum) +-- Forum: Range Rover Evoque Discussions (/Forum-Range-Rover-Evoque-Discussions) +--- Forum: Going Off Tarmac (/Forum-Going-Off-Tarmac) +--- Thread: Wet Roads, Irish Bridges and Fords (/Thread-Wet-Roads-Irish-Bridges-and-Fords) |
Wet Roads, Irish Bridges and Fords - XFullFatTim - 17-10-2012 03:42pm Following on from a previous post, if people want to try crossing water in their Evoque there is a good website to find your local fords, wet roads and Irish Bridges. http://www.wetroads.co.uk Be careful to read water depth gauges/ check the depth, don't rush into the water ease the car in then accelerate with a good bow wave and don't bite off more than you can chew - especially if there has been a lot of rain and streams/ rivers are swollen. An Evoque is not as heavy as a Defender and will end up floating a lot sooner even though it has the same wading depth! Here two videos of of the same stream............................ Dry day Same place in the rain Don't try this in your Evoque! RE: Wet Roads, Irish Bridges and Fords - doug - 17-10-2012 04:06pm Have you seen the video of the LR driven across a river bed with the water UP TO THE WINDOWS Or the netter off roading a old RR towing a caravan, making a right mess of the green lane RE: Wet Roads, Irish Bridges and Fords - XFullFatTim - 17-10-2012 04:16pm There are some right prats that go offroad without any consideration for the land/ trails/ other track users in England, fortunately here in Scotland we cannot just go and drive on green lanes - we have no public rights of way as such here and you MUST have the land owner's permission before you carve up his land. There is less animosity to offroading up here although there are nutters who do go off roading illegally and get the rest of us a bad name. Also for the most part people up here go as part of a club and that makes it much much easier to control behaviour and tear-aways, they get banned! It is frustrating to have acres and acres of land that would be lovely to drive but a lot of the publicly owned land (ie owned by the utility companies and the water board) is controlled by many risk averse managers who don't like anything that could end up with bad publicity or worse being mentioned in the papers. |