I used the socks at 9600ft in the West Elk mountains of Colorado yesterday. I think the Cybertruck could have made it up the steep snowy roads without the snow socks, but having them on up there was nice.
Do you have any plan for new content on pick up trucks like the Lightning and Silverado? I do not have interest on tesla. The BEV pick up truck segment is growing and I find that content more interesting. Nice job on editing.
@@kelviskelvis7140 I have a AWD Sprinter with a winch bumper that has a 2 inch receiver. I was thinking plowing with Sprinter wearing snow socks would be some fun content, up in Colorado where there is some deep snow.
Snow socks are a joke, remember some mountain passes Do Not allow socks only chain and some have rules like over 5000lbs GVW No or any commercial vehicle No. Here we got 3 passes one is no socks, the other 2 are over 21,000 No. But also they do not recognize traction aids such as tire socks or so-called “cable-chains” here so if you get in a crash they can deny your claim. It happened to a coworker of mine last winter where he had those on went off the road and insurance denied his claim because of them.
@@robertcolquhoun1468 I have been using the Snowsocks in heavy snow at 9600ft on steep snow packed trails in the West Elk Mountains of Colorado, and I an absoutly amazed by them. I used to use big thick chains on my 4x4 Tacoma, but I swear I get better grip with the Cybertruck and the snowsocks. I even rescued a Colorado State Trooper who was stuck in a snowy ditch with the snowsock equiped Cybertruck. The Trooper was super gratiful because where we were he had no Cell Phone, or Radio signal.
@ I used to do a lot of winter wheeling in my bronco 2 and my 4Runner and found airing right down would let you plow through the snow and only slap on the chains when I had that hard crust layer or it got icy. But I was just letting people know snow socks are not all they are cracked up to be and there are places where there not recognize and some insurance company can op out on your coverage because of them. When you losing traction it doesn’t matter what you have. We run studded tires on the wife’s CX5 in the winter and there’s been times slipping and sliding. Christmas Day we took my sister new bronco spot to the top of the mountain and she running the new Ko3’s and we got stuck even put on chains and still sitting in place spinning needed to get a little pull before we could start making our way down. But that happens when you don’t pack it down before stop and hop out
Very cool! I’ve never seen these used before but they seem quite effective.
@@skylerity I was legitimally suprised by the grip these gave me on the ice. I want some for my shoes.
Same as excessive. My grandmother seems to get plenty of traction with her normal truck and she doesn't have weird traction socks
He was just testing. We don't get a ton of opportunities to do that in dallas.
I used the socks at 9600ft in the West Elk mountains of Colorado yesterday. I think the Cybertruck could have made it up the steep snowy roads without the snow socks, but having them on up there was nice.
That's cool
@@theweldonatorsamputeejourney I am wondering how to DIY these for EUC wheels and scooters.
@charleskieser9740 that would definitely be a top seller if you could pull it off. Maybe even for Fat Bikes
Just an info, do not leave it on for long periods in the snow/ice, they might "glue" themselves to the snow/ice and they get damaged!
Good Advice, thank you.
Do you have any plan for new content on pick up trucks like the Lightning and Silverado? I do not have interest on tesla. The BEV pick up truck segment is growing and I find that content more interesting. Nice job on editing.
@@kelviskelvis7140 I have a AWD Sprinter with a winch bumper that has a 2 inch receiver. I was thinking plowing with Sprinter wearing snow socks would be some fun content, up in Colorado where there is some deep snow.
@@charleskieser9740 Looking forward to watching that. - Thanks.
Snow socks are a joke, remember some mountain passes Do Not allow socks only chain and some have rules like over 5000lbs GVW No or any commercial vehicle No.
Here we got 3 passes one is no socks, the other 2 are over 21,000 No.
But also they do not recognize traction aids such as tire socks or so-called “cable-chains” here so if you get in a crash they can deny your claim.
It happened to a coworker of mine last winter where he had those on went off the road and insurance denied his claim because of them.
@@robertcolquhoun1468 I have been using the Snowsocks in heavy snow at 9600ft on steep snow packed trails in the West Elk Mountains of Colorado, and I an absoutly amazed by them. I used to use big thick chains on my 4x4 Tacoma, but I swear I get better grip with the Cybertruck and the snowsocks. I even rescued a Colorado State Trooper who was stuck in a snowy ditch with the snowsock equiped Cybertruck. The Trooper was super gratiful because where we were he had no Cell Phone, or Radio signal.
@ I used to do a lot of winter wheeling in my bronco 2 and my 4Runner and found airing right down would let you plow through the snow and only slap on the chains when I had that hard crust layer or it got icy.
But I was just letting people know snow socks are not all they are cracked up to be and there are places where there not recognize and some insurance company can op out on your coverage because of them. When you losing traction it doesn’t matter what you have. We run studded tires on the wife’s CX5 in the winter and there’s been times slipping and sliding. Christmas Day we took my sister new bronco spot to the top of the mountain and she running the new Ko3’s and we got stuck even put on chains and still sitting in place spinning needed to get a little pull before we could start making our way down. But that happens when you don’t pack it down before stop and hop out