So I'm the guy stuck in the white Outback... Huge thank you to Matt and Rhett for pulling me out. Matt was so kind and genuine. Before Matt pulled me out, I tried backing up to go around that whole area, but I slid right into that puddle. It was about 18 inches deep. I managed to get the Subaru to drier ground to the side where Matt pulled me out. It had been raining in southern Utah and Nevada for a couple days. The clay in that area is incredibly slick when wet. Also the Banana is 1,000% cooler in person!
Yup the spot where mine in stored in the back by the spare tire even says right on it "Recovery Tow Eye". I have 4 corner attachment points for it and the owners manual says they can be used to "assist in vehicle recovery or towing situations". I've used mine to actually tow other people out of a ditch - that may be a little off label but it still works fine!
Yup definately a tow point. Subaru did away with shipping hooks. 95/95 shippinh hooks were reaclled for setting the airbags off. They didnt last much past that
I have ZERO vehicle mechanics knowledge, but it never made any sense that it'd be something for shipping, to me. Why would they only have one of them and only in one corner. Funny how "old wives" get such a bad rap. Should be "Old Car Guy tales" or "Old Woodworkers tales" or "Old Golf Course Locker Room tales" as I've heard more epic horse hocky come out of those groups than any old lady! LOL!
Definitely a tow eye! I worked at a ford dealership many years ago, we removed the shipping tie downs off new cars and recycled them via shipping them back to the factory once we had a full crate! There was two on the rear and one to two upfront depending on model!
They're literally there for when the vehicle needs to be towed or winched onto a roll back. Crazy how you see the 18 wheelers loaded down with all of them cars being shipped to dealers never using those tow points 😂 internet experts are the worst.
This was like going back in time! No fancy winches, No giant tow trucks, just a very capable 4wd vehicle yanking out someone who happened to get stuck. The kind of videos that got me hooked on MORR in the first place! I will say that the editing is way better, and the MORR team has changed, but this was a fun video!
I too recall those early days with nostalgia. When a small yellow jeep performed miracles with a yankum rope. I am happy that Matt has achieved such great success with this channel. It is well earned. But, like most other things in this world, the more they change - the more I miss the “old days”!
I think Matt's partially right about unexpected changes like rain turning the road to mud as the cause for people getting stranded. Here's another idea -- car advertisers seems to be going out of their way to show certain vehicles as being perfectly suitable for unpaved and off-road driving. As though all-wheel drive means being able to get through a sand dune or snow drift. And if you can even read the small print at the bottom, it's usually saying that the vehicles shown had undergone what amounts to thousands of dollars worth of modification. The commercials don't show you the trucks and trailers and cranes that were used in getting some vehicles to where they're being shown. My favorites are the craggy, cliff-top shots of some Nissan Rogue or similar car perched as though it had been driven there. As long as folks keep buying into that nonsense, we'll always have great recovery videos from Matt and the crew.
I've certainly noticed this. The rise in vehicles that call themselves off-road, that can call themselves all wheel drive on a technicality. I'm all for getting people into off-roading, but companies advertising like they do does not teach anyone what they really need for it. I don't really know much more than what I've seen on channels like this. I would know enough that if I bought a vehicle like that I wouldn't be buying into the advertising, but most people aren't lucky enough to have that knowledge. That's to say nothing of how much bigger and heavier vehicles have gotten over the years, especially pickups that never haul more than the driver. Most of them wouldn't have the strength to haul a trailer of hay. These corporations just love selling something they pretend is the solution to problems that people don't have.
Was thinking of you guys a lot last night, had to strap my truck to the front of a 5K Kabota, that was trying to pull a 15K lbs New Holland tractor up an icey hill, get it off the highway.. (Hydrostatic drive wouldn't engage at all) 30 feet later I ran out of traction, then Matt and the Morrvair popped into my head, started sawing the steering back and forth(I've been doing snow and ice recoveries, un ditching people, my whole life but that's an unheard of trick, at least around here, I wasn't taught that one), Thanks Matt, you got me another 20 feet! before I ran out of all traction. Hadn't been for remembering that trick, we wouldn't have made it.
@@USAMontananMatt isn’t charging for most tows to the best of my knowledge. The whole point is that he wants people to be calling him first so he can make UA-cam content, which gives him FAR more money than a minor tow charge.
I kind of thought that the customer was the father of a Girl Scout, and by giving Matt a box of cookies, dad would pay for them, and Matt gets a delicious box of cookies.
@@trevorp5969 Wasn’t for charging too much money. He got in trouble for charging for tows that weren’t on the correct days, or delaying billing for the tows until someone got insurance, or, if insurance wouldn’t cover the job, helping them out by claiming the insurance on another job they might have. Yep, illegal, but morally…gray. Trying to help people. There was never any accusations that he was trying to bilk insurance for more money than just what the jobs were worth, or use it gain money he wasn’t owed. It was Casey from the other recovery channel competing with Matt at the time that turned him in.
Those are tow eyes and they are very strong when used properly. Don’t listen to people who have absolutely no idea what they are talking about. There is a connection point in both the front and rear bumpers so the car can be pulled from either direction. To use them, you are supposed to tighten them with the tire tool to remove the lash from the threads. I have used mine to recover my Outback out of a creek bottom where the car roof was below the level of the bank. I had a 20’ strap and backed my truck all the way up to the creek bank and then lunged as hard as my truck could go. I pulled the Outback all the way up and out of the creek bottom in one pull. It didn’t hurt the tow eye at all. Don’t be afraid to use them, just make sure to tighten them up first.
Agreed, I've puled out many vehicles with just those tow eyes. Great for straight pulls. But no reason to tighten them with anything other than hands. Easy to get them tight.
I love all the MORR recovery rigs, but Dig Dug does have a special place in my heart. Every time I see TomTom rocking up with that little rig, It brings a smile on my face. Yes, I know Tom owns it and not MORR, but it's a capable vehicle!
Matt has to be the realist man on youtube...... his up front kindness and willingness to actually teach others with the understanding that not everyone solves problems in the same manner.
In my recent video we used the "Tow Eye" to recover a Crosstrek that had been smashed by a falling tree on our journey. We yanked on that thing hard and it took the abuse. I used to be one of those people saying its only for shipping blah blah blah. When it comes down to it in the heat of the moment they work! The Outback's have better hook points but they are behind the lip of the bumper and not easily accessible at all.... I am very happy my 97 Legacy Outback has both a rear tow point and 2 very hefty shackles in the front. They don't make em' like they used to! I have Wildpeak AT3 and a 2.5 inch lift on forester struts and i don't think even i would have risked that mud. idk what he was thinking being out in that terrain with a stock Outback and a rubberband cvt....😂 Good Job Matt! SUBIE NATION!
I recommend everyone should carry a short shovel in the car. I got stuck in snow once in the minivan just driving around town, but I had a shovel and a gallon jug of traction sand mixed with used ice cream salt. Self recovery FTW.
as a collision technician i can definitely say that those are for the tow truck to winch the car on, its not for shipping and its in the system for pretty much every car as a tow hook. the actual hook itself might be made for shipping or whatever but the design on the car is 1000% NOT for shipping
Yep exactly. They wouldn't tell you in the manual to use them for towing, and they wouldn't supply you with the tow eye if they could save the $2 and not give you one.
My dad was in ww2 and they trained them on vehicle recovery. He would say pull from the most stuck point. In this case that would mean you connect to the right front so the most force and power is put as close to the highest resistance area (stuck point)without the force having to transfer through the structure of the vehicle. It worked pulling out tractors
I'm with you! I hate mud! So many around where I live love mud. They don't realize this is not like mudding back east. It ruins the roads and is very bad for your vehicle - like sandpaper in all those moving suspension and steering parts. Also, if the manual calls it a tow eye than I'd say it's a tow eye.
Yes that is definitely a towing eye, but " shipping tie down points " do not exist. Any metal loops or holes in the underbody are there for towing, not shipping. As a previous commenter said, tire slings are used for shipping. If you tried to use the tow points to secure the vehicle, you would have to fully compress the suspension to have the vehicle stabilized. You can surely see people on youtube tieing down vehicles above the suspension, but that doesn't make it right.
This is for sure a tow eye. But, most Subaru's do have 2 recoveryhooks at the front. About at location of the headlight, 10cm backwards at the front bumper. Those are pretty solid.
...hint for the video editors at MORR - 32 degrees Fahrenheit (zero degrees Celsius) is the freezing point of water; anything below 32 degrees Fahrenheit MUST be a negative number on the Celsius scale !!!
All were nice smooth recoveries,as a well trained crew will do with ease. Really liked the all blue of the Toyota truck, but that smile at the end shines the best.
I’ve actually been surprised at how well my Outback does in the mud with nothing but some aired down all terrain tires. It’s no jeep but the light weight definitely helps it stay on top as long as you stay on the throttle.
Rhett's enthusiasm and personality are something that we rarely see in todays kids. I see a Mini-Matt in the making. His level of maturity is that of someone much older- except when it comes to playing with his toys.
I just had an idea when I saw Brett trimming the zip ties: You know all those short pieces you cut off? Save some of them because if you run them through a hot glue gun, you can use them to mend plastic bumpers and panels! Cut a groove into the backside of the break. Apply strong tape to the front side, to hold the two pieces together and melt the zip ties into the groove, similar to a weld. Just imagine how many happy faces you could 'produce' by repairing people's broken plastic on their vehicles. Another way to repair them is to use a small, thin piece of metal, with plenty of holes (or some heavy flat mesh), heat it until it's glowing and then press it into the back side of the break. Cool with water. Then you could use the zip tie trick to add extra plastic over the metal piece. Some epoxy and elbow grease and it's ready for painting. Maybe I should tell Robby about this?
Sounds like too much effort for Matt. Lol. As long as it doesn't fall off whilst pulling, it's good enough. If it does, then he will just throw it in the back.
Congrats Matt for being selected to participate in the FREEDOM 500, always wanted you to be there and i know you did as well, once again congrats, cant wait to see you drive in that whole mess of youtubers destruction lol.
I noticed many of these 4 wheelers try to go off road with the stock tire that were originally sold with the truck. I had to replace the original Goodyears on my Ram and upgraded to BF Goodrich KOs all season. Makes a big difference in mud and snow.
25F is minus 4 C, it's below freezing 🥶Not bad, but beanie (touque in Canada) weather if you are staying outside. Coincidentally, it is -4C right now where I sit in Ottawa, Ontario, so I feel your suffering :) Although it is our winterlude festival here, and it's not cold enough. We can't skate on the canal...
Matt is always so diplomatic. No reason on this earth why that first vehicle should have been there, that wasn't a car, or crossover "xuv" track on the best day! Great recovery as always ...
The customer in the Toyota asked me not to attach to the tow hooks. He was worried about the bumper bending. Going forward on the Chevy would have smashed the front air dam even worse.
Hey Rhett! We need a pocket check of your EDC and you can tell us more about you knife! I don't see anyone else on this channel using pocket knifes so that was a real treat.
2:23 That, right there, IS A TOWING EYE. The shipping tie-downs are the loops of bent steel welded to the chassis somewhere underneath, front and back. Reason it's still NOT a good idea to recover from a "towing eye" (as Matt well-knows) is because they're really only intended for towing a vehicle along a road and putting a lot of load into one, especially at an angle, can bend it or even snap it off.
When they film a recovery they usually have no idea where that recovery will end up in a video so I'm sure Rhett just does it so in case it's the last recovery in the video it's there. Otherwise, whoever is editing should edit it out.
Father and son going on a job after working on a project together....that is damned touching ✌🏻 ...and having just watched Dances with Wolves the good trade line would have been a perfect edit there 😂
If you bend the cable tie over, and cut along the stressed point flush with the square bit, the tie will cut perfectly flush, square and smooth; if your knife is sharp enough, you will not have to saw. No more cable tie spike cuts. You can employ a similar technique with side cutters: one jaw sliding along the top of the square and the other jaw purchasing on the non catch side, but just using flush cutters work the best.
rain is the far part the west. it turns these dirt roads from roads that a boxtruck could drive down with little issue to full on 10/10 trails. in my part of the country the clay never dries so its like this year round unless it does not rain for a full month in the summer
I don't what your fees are, and wouldn't care if I was stuck! Anyway, you guys seem to stay busy. Keep sending the awsome videos, my wife and kids are finally beginning to watch with me. It's helping them see how NOT to get stuck! Always a fan. Kudos!
Until the CVT overheats and cuts power. Seen that happen too. Subaru is finally figuring out their decades long engine reliability issues, and now they have a whole new breed of issues.
One thing I love to see you do with your nylon ropes, keep them out of the dirt and mud. Killer for nylon ropes. Great job Matt !!!! I am sure when you get them back to the shop you clean them up. Sand and mud are like sandpaper to the straps.
@@JohnFL Howdy back at you... Oh? what is this? Did Mr. J get first spot? That is amazing.. Good on you. What will you do with your new found fame and fortune that this title brings?
Interesting, the Tow/recovery Eyes I've used in UK working in fleet management have all being Left Hand threads. The reason I have been told is that when using a winch cable, the cable under tension try's to untwist and would undue a right hand thread. Also look to have a coarser thread.
Thank you Matt and crew. I don’t know whether it was my machine or whether is your your video but the sound for you dropped out and I and you are suck out of sync and in a number of places. Thank you mate thank you guys
Been big into cars and trucks for over a decade and never once have I heard a single person say that those things are for shipping, tie down, anything other than towing. Call them a tow hook, myself, despite being a ring/eye and not a hook lol.
I always chuckle when I see people dig the wheels out. I mean they're halfway to digging the axles out, (which is what needs to be done) but they just stop.
Good idea. Maybe they could go online and find out what size different cars use . On a video a few years ago Matt talked about how they only work on a straight pull . The little eye bolt will snap if any pressure is put on the side
Hey Tom If you toe anymore Z71 Off road package For the Silverado Z71Is guaranteed to be 4 wheel drive Z71Even have leather seats To help clean up mud.
The bumper on that tacoma has D-rings.. they are more than strong enough to pull it out. done it many times same bumper, same style.. the one I have is slightly different, but definitly strong enough for a kinetic recovery. its got a winch plate on it capable of a 10,000-12,000lb winch...
True, but honestly, owning an ascent and 4x4 jeep, I think Subaru did a good enough job with the symmetrical AWD that that isn't the limiting factor most of the time - the only time we've run into issues with our ascent in the sand when the jeep was able to do it was when we've got it heavily packed (luggage, people) or when we used to run stock height and normal tires. With our tires and the 2" lift the thing is a boss!
@@JimYeats oh yeah, for anyone else who owns an ascent, on the interior fuse panel pull the fuse on the very bottom in the middle. Make sure you do it while the vehicle isn't in park because it won't let you shift out of it while the fuse is pulled. Drive around for a moment and slowly, everything traction control related will stop working, including eyesight. Works well for deep sand if you have good throttle control (account for turbo lag sometimes) or snow drifting. Otherwise, x-mode does a great job and does allow wheel slip
Working out of town this week in Denver. Got back to the hotel tonight and there is a Subaru in the parking lot with the tie eye installed and a bow shackle hanging from it!
They are legendary for their AWD system for a good reason. Own an Outback myself and I'm very very happy with it, always feel safe in the road and know it will take me forth under any weather condition, or well, at least the conditions thrown at me where I live, haha.
I watched one of your videos from 5 months ago where you picked up the front of a vehicle with the wrecker and dead pulled it out of the woods for a few miles with a missing right front tire. You used your red nylon straps with the black kevlar outer protective cover. Those straps are great, but as a union ironworker of 35 yrs. That black protective cover can get cut. What we would do for an added layer of protection like you have in cases where you are hooking up to the frame. Like when the strap is going to slide up to a V in the frame or just have a sharp edge. We would take an old strap that has been cut and can not use anymore. Cut out the bad section and then cut up the rest in 1 foot, 2 foot even 4 foot sections to put under our good red straps to make sure they did not get cut or damaged. Trust me, those red straps with the black kevlar cut get cut. Especially the way you haul with a swinging load and not constant pressure on each strap. Just an added layer of protection, those red kevlar protected strap are not cheap. P.S. If you use a 2 inch red strap, use and piece of old 4 inch old strap as a softner. Some times you need to roll the softner over the front edge for a pinch point. You get the idea.
So I'm the guy stuck in the white Outback...
Huge thank you to Matt and Rhett for pulling me out. Matt was so kind and genuine. Before Matt pulled me out, I tried backing up to go around that whole area, but I slid right into that puddle. It was about 18 inches deep. I managed to get the Subaru to drier ground to the side where Matt pulled me out. It had been raining in southern Utah and Nevada for a couple days. The clay in that area is incredibly slick when wet. Also the Banana is 1,000% cooler in person!
Stuff happens lol glad you made it out safe
thanks for the proof thin mints are worth their weight in gold!
I would have done the same thing, you never know how deep is the pond/lake! 🤪
dude at least have a lift and tires..w t f were u even thinking
@@Fony_turgeson Who Dares Wins.
It’s a tow eye, Vehicles are shipped with tires tethered so suspension still flexes. We ship 946 a day. Internet experts are 10 a dollar.
Yup the spot where mine in stored in the back by the spare tire even says right on it "Recovery Tow Eye". I have 4 corner attachment points for it and the owners manual says they can be used to "assist in vehicle recovery or towing situations". I've used mine to actually tow other people out of a ditch - that may be a little off label but it still works fine!
And they are often missing!
Oh how we yearn for the good ol' days when.......
Yup definately a tow point. Subaru did away with shipping hooks. 95/95 shippinh hooks were reaclled for setting the airbags off. They didnt last much past that
If it was a shipping thing they wouldn’t leave it with the vehicle and like you said, suspension has to move freely or you will break frames
I have ZERO vehicle mechanics knowledge, but it never made any sense that it'd be something for shipping, to me. Why would they only have one of them and only in one corner. Funny how "old wives" get such a bad rap. Should be "Old Car Guy tales" or "Old Woodworkers tales" or "Old Golf Course Locker Room tales" as I've heard more epic horse hocky come out of those groups than any old lady! LOL!
Don’t listen to them Matt! That was definitely a tow eye, not a shipping tie down. Where do people come up with this stuff!
subaru people🤣😂 they read it on the internet somewhere and now they are an expert
The Subaru Manual calls it a tow hook.
Definitely a tow eye! I worked at a ford dealership many years ago, we removed the shipping tie downs off new cars and recycled them via shipping them back to the factory once we had a full crate! There was two on the rear and one to two upfront depending on model!
They're literally there for when the vehicle needs to be towed or winched onto a roll back. Crazy how you see the 18 wheelers loaded down with all of them cars being shipped to dealers never using those tow points 😂 internet experts are the worst.
If it was a tie down it would be pointing in the wrong direction. Odd for every manufacturer that uses those to get that little detail wrong.
8:00 Tom: "When the rope starts to tighten up, just giv......."
Customer: VROOMMMMMMM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Even before the Morrvair had started to move.
And then: "Stop! Stop!"
VROOMMM!!! VROOMMM!!! VROOMMM!!! 🤣
😂
Haha, that’s the Subaru way. Mash the throttle and let the computer sort things out.
You would think they would know how to drive in sand
@@chadwick1195 he's talking about the Tacoma
Rhett is such a good-natured kid (and has obvious natural talent for the work). Props to the parents.
7:12 - I like how the "recovery board" is placed like a tombstone. Seems like that's the best use for them.
This was like going back in time! No fancy winches, No giant tow trucks, just a very capable 4wd vehicle yanking out someone who happened to get stuck. The kind of videos that got me hooked on MORR in the first place! I will say that the editing is way better, and the MORR team has changed, but this was a fun video!
Let's not go back to the anti winch era however 😂 That was rough at times 😮
@@iridium8341 No, I can't afford it. :(
I too recall those early days with nostalgia. When a small yellow jeep performed miracles with a yankum rope. I am happy that Matt has achieved such great success with this channel. It is well earned. But, like most other things in this world, the more they change - the more I miss the “old days”!
@@Taid44 Very well said!
@@61rampy65 You can sign up online for free, to get the live streams. The app is actually broken right now so it works best from a browser
I think Matt's partially right about unexpected changes like rain turning the road to mud as the cause for people getting stranded. Here's another idea -- car advertisers seems to be going out of their way to show certain vehicles as being perfectly suitable for unpaved and off-road driving. As though all-wheel drive means being able to get through a sand dune or snow drift. And if you can even read the small print at the bottom, it's usually saying that the vehicles shown had undergone what amounts to thousands of dollars worth of modification. The commercials don't show you the trucks and trailers and cranes that were used in getting some vehicles to where they're being shown. My favorites are the craggy, cliff-top shots of some Nissan Rogue or similar car perched as though it had been driven there. As long as folks keep buying into that nonsense, we'll always have great recovery videos from Matt and the crew.
Yup. Not exactly truth in advertising...
All wheel drive is a good tool, but you can’t put a 10” hole in concrete with a handheld ryobi drill.
I've certainly noticed this. The rise in vehicles that call themselves off-road, that can call themselves all wheel drive on a technicality. I'm all for getting people into off-roading, but companies advertising like they do does not teach anyone what they really need for it. I don't really know much more than what I've seen on channels like this. I would know enough that if I bought a vehicle like that I wouldn't be buying into the advertising, but most people aren't lucky enough to have that knowledge.
That's to say nothing of how much bigger and heavier vehicles have gotten over the years, especially pickups that never haul more than the driver. Most of them wouldn't have the strength to haul a trailer of hay. These corporations just love selling something they pretend is the solution to problems that people don't have.
Notto mention it says performed by professionals on a closed course
Definitely a pet peeve of mine. Advertising glorified go-karts as capable trail bosses.
That guy at the end was so Polite!!! Love that.
I was surprised too until he mentioned he was a firefighter. Probably still a probie since he looked so young 👏👏
Was thinking of you guys a lot last night, had to strap my truck to the front of a 5K Kabota, that was trying to pull a 15K lbs New Holland tractor up an icey hill, get it off the highway.. (Hydrostatic drive wouldn't engage at all) 30 feet later I ran out of traction, then Matt and the Morrvair popped into my head, started sawing the steering back and forth(I've been doing snow and ice recoveries, un ditching people, my whole life but that's an unheard of trick, at least around here, I wasn't taught that one), Thanks Matt, you got me another 20 feet! before I ran out of all traction. Hadn't been for remembering that trick, we wouldn't have made it.
“Trading a box of cookies for a tow!” 😄 Talk about generous heart👍
@@USAMontananI think Matt implied he did the tow for the box of cookies, which is awesome!
@@USAMontananMatt isn’t charging for most tows to the best of my knowledge. The whole point is that he wants people to be calling him first so he can make UA-cam content, which gives him FAR more money than a minor tow charge.
I kind of thought that the customer was the father of a Girl Scout, and by giving Matt a box of cookies, dad would pay for them, and Matt gets a delicious box of cookies.
You guys forget he was in trouble for charging insurance companies to much money? Was on probation for it
@@trevorp5969 Wasn’t for charging too much money. He got in trouble for charging for tows that weren’t on the correct days, or delaying billing for the tows until someone got insurance, or, if insurance wouldn’t cover the job, helping them out by claiming the insurance on another job they might have.
Yep, illegal, but morally…gray. Trying to help people. There was never any accusations that he was trying to bilk insurance for more money than just what the jobs were worth, or use it gain money he wasn’t owed.
It was Casey from the other recovery channel competing with Matt at the time that turned him in.
And how is there not a Matts off-road recovery shovel yet? Folds away neatly in your glove compartment by your pie dispenser…
And how often do you see Mat using a shovel? One recovery in 20? They don't even carry them unless they are doing something special.
That's what a claw hammer is for 😂
Those are tow eyes and they are very strong when used properly. Don’t listen to people who have absolutely no idea what they are talking about.
There is a connection point in both the front and rear bumpers so the car can be pulled from either direction. To use them, you are supposed to tighten them with the tire tool to remove the lash from the threads.
I have used mine to recover my Outback out of a creek bottom where the car roof was below the level of the bank. I had a 20’ strap and backed my truck all the way up to the creek bank and then lunged as hard as my truck could go. I pulled the Outback all the way up and out of the creek bottom in one pull. It didn’t hurt the tow eye at all.
Don’t be afraid to use them, just make sure to tighten them up first.
Yup I got yanked out of the mud by a jeep using that point. Worked just fine.
Agreed, I've puled out many vehicles with just those tow eyes. Great for straight pulls. But no reason to tighten them with anything other than hands. Easy to get them tight.
@@mediocreman2 not for just a yank out, but if you are hauling it to a destination across town then you want to make sure it's in there good.😊
I love all the MORR recovery rigs, but Dig Dug does have a special place in my heart. Every time I see TomTom rocking up with that little rig, It brings a smile on my face.
Yes, I know Tom owns it and not MORR, but it's a capable vehicle!
Matt if that was for shipping wouldn't it be on both sides not just one side
i came here to say the same thing, Dig Dug is my favorite in the fleet
Tom has to put some tshirts in Dig Dug!
Like Tow Mater, Dig Dug is greater than the sum of the parts.
Thanks everyone! I'm hoping to do some upgrades in the next few months so Dig Doug can hang with the rest of the MORR fleet.
I called them tow eyes when driving the rollback. The left hand threads were designed to not unscrew when the steel winch rope twisted under pressure.
Matt has to be the realist man on youtube...... his up front kindness and willingness to actually teach others with the understanding that not everyone solves problems in the same manner.
In my recent video we used the "Tow Eye" to recover a Crosstrek that had been smashed by a falling tree on our journey. We yanked on that thing hard and it took the abuse. I used to be one of those people saying its only for shipping blah blah blah. When it comes down to it in the heat of the moment they work! The Outback's have better hook points but they are behind the lip of the bumper and not easily accessible at all.... I am very happy my 97 Legacy Outback has both a rear tow point and 2 very hefty shackles in the front. They don't make em' like they used to! I have Wildpeak AT3 and a 2.5 inch lift on forester struts and i don't think even i would have risked that mud. idk what he was thinking being out in that terrain with a stock Outback and a rubberband cvt....😂 Good Job Matt! SUBIE NATION!
I recommend everyone should carry a short shovel in the car. I got stuck in snow once in the minivan just driving around town, but I had a shovel and a gallon jug of traction sand mixed with used ice cream salt. Self recovery FTW.
as a collision technician i can definitely say that those are for the tow truck to winch the car on, its not for shipping and its in the system for pretty much every car as a tow hook. the actual hook itself might be made for shipping or whatever but the design on the car is 1000% NOT for shipping
Yep exactly. They wouldn't tell you in the manual to use them for towing, and they wouldn't supply you with the tow eye if they could save the $2 and not give you one.
My dad was in ww2 and they trained them on vehicle recovery. He would say pull from the most stuck point. In this case that would mean you connect to the right front so the most force and power is put as close to the highest resistance area (stuck point)without the force having to transfer through the structure of the vehicle. It worked pulling out tractors
Nice recoveries, all of you. It sure helps when you have the equipment to do the job. Thanks for the video.
The Banana and the Morrvair sound great, the Wrecker even better, but Digdug sound GNARLY! Love it!
Hey Rhett just a little tip on those wires on the A pillar, run them on the inside of the cage that way trees or rocks don't rip them off. 13:28
Probably just pushed it around later.
I'm with you! I hate mud! So many around where I live love mud. They don't realize this is not like mudding back east. It ruins the roads and is very bad for your vehicle - like sandpaper in all those moving suspension and steering parts. Also, if the manual calls it a tow eye than I'd say it's a tow eye.
Re: Outback - that is definitely a towing eye. The shipping tie down points are underneath.
Yes that is definitely a towing eye, but " shipping tie down points " do not exist. Any metal loops or holes in the underbody are there for towing, not shipping. As a previous commenter said, tire slings are used for shipping. If you tried to use the tow points to secure the vehicle, you would have to fully compress the suspension to have the vehicle stabilized. You can surely see people on youtube tieing down vehicles above the suspension, but that doesn't make it right.
Matt, you are correct. some people don't know if they should wind their but or scratch their watch....it's totally a tow point!
"Where the FUN begins," just gotta to love Rhett and his youthful outlook
This is for sure a tow eye.
But, most Subaru's do have 2 recoveryhooks at the front. About at location of the headlight, 10cm backwards at the front bumper. Those are pretty solid.
Rhett, your smile at the end after cutting that zip tie is priceless!!!
Matt is awesome, he cares about the customers and their vehicles, taking care to be sure they do not get damaged.
Another good one. If Tom "Drops the Hammer " would that be a tomahawk chop??
Awesome to hear you'll be racing in the Freedom 500, Good luck! That helicopter would be great for spotting recoveries!
Zip ties makes the dream work!! 13:41
Roadkill fans have known for a long time, when it doubt, fix it with zipties!
Rhett has been a great addition to the channel. He's great on camera, great with his hands. Very nice young man who has a bright future ahead of him 😊
Editor forgot to stick a (-) in front of the 4ºC at 5:11, else Tom Tom wouldn’t be commenting on how cold it was 😂
...hint for the video editors at MORR - 32 degrees Fahrenheit (zero degrees Celsius) is the freezing point of water; anything below 32 degrees Fahrenheit MUST be a negative number on the Celsius scale !!!
All were nice smooth recoveries,as a well trained crew will do with ease. Really liked the all blue of the Toyota truck, but that smile at the end shines the best.
G'day from the Outback. I bloody hate mud too.
I’ve actually been surprised at how well my Outback does in the mud with nothing but some aired down all terrain tires. It’s no jeep but the light weight definitely helps it stay on top as long as you stay on the throttle.
Excited to see you in the freedom 500
Matt, there are two kinds of line. Static and Dynamic. And same for two kinds of pull. Kinetic just means you're connected.
Kinetic ropes make use of kinetic energy
Rhett's enthusiasm and personality are something that we rarely see in todays kids. I see a Mini-Matt in the making. His level of maturity is that of someone much older- except when it comes to playing with his toys.
So exactly like his dad
I think Rhett could start his own UA-cam channel and have a lot of subscribers.
Rhett! "I wish I had a grandson like that" -young man. (I don't have one) Hugs from Belgium.
I just had an idea when I saw Brett trimming the zip ties: You know all those short pieces you cut off? Save some of them because if you run them through a hot glue gun, you can use them to mend plastic bumpers and panels! Cut a groove into the backside of the break. Apply strong tape to the front side, to hold the two pieces together and melt the zip ties into the groove, similar to a weld. Just imagine how many happy faces you could 'produce' by repairing people's broken plastic on their vehicles.
Another way to repair them is to use a small, thin piece of metal, with plenty of holes (or some heavy flat mesh), heat it until it's glowing and then press it into the back side of the break. Cool with water. Then you could use the zip tie trick to add extra plastic over the metal piece. Some epoxy and elbow grease and it's ready for painting.
Maybe I should tell Robby about this?
Robby has a plastic welder that does that. But good idea for people at home to use.
Sounds like too much effort for Matt. Lol. As long as it doesn't fall off whilst pulling, it's good enough. If it does, then he will just throw it in the back.
You are correct Mat that is a towing eye shipping points are at 45 deg and on the frame
Congrats Matt for being selected to participate in the FREEDOM 500, always wanted you to be there and i know you did as well, once again congrats, cant wait to see you drive in that whole mess of youtubers destruction lol.
I am so thankful for Matt and the entire crew. Your team makes these videos such a treat to watch!
Shipping tie downs will break if used to tow, toe eyes can be used for either. It didn't break & it got it out so it's a toe eye! Just saying 😜😁
I noticed many of these 4 wheelers try to go off road with the stock tire that were originally sold with the truck. I had to replace the original Goodyears on my Ram and upgraded to BF Goodrich KOs all season. Makes a big difference in mud and snow.
Love your easy smiles Matt. Oh how easy they must be. Dad.
25F is minus 4 C, it's below freezing 🥶Not bad, but beanie (touque in Canada) weather if you are staying outside. Coincidentally, it is -4C right now where I sit in Ottawa, Ontario, so I feel your suffering :) Although it is our winterlude festival here, and it's not cold enough. We can't skate on the canal...
When I worked at a car dealership we always found the tow eyes wrapped in plastic in the trunk, weren't used to shipping to us......
I'm super excited to see you guys at the Freedom Factory in April.
lol - That video of Matt with the ice cream! hahahahaha!
Since Matt and his family on Vacation
Matt is always so diplomatic. No reason on this earth why that first vehicle should have been there, that wasn't a car, or crossover "xuv" track on the best day!
Great recovery as always ...
7:33 Why is tom tom worried about attaching to ACTUAL tow hooks?
On both jobs. Chevy had factory tow hooks and could have been pulled out forward preventing the valance from breaking 🤔
The customer in the Toyota asked me not to attach to the tow hooks. He was worried about the bumper bending. Going forward on the Chevy would have smashed the front air dam even worse.
@@tomtomsshop Thanks for clarifying that
As being a union ironworker, I am amazed how good those soft shackles work. Great find Matt !!!
Hey Rhett! We need a pocket check of your EDC and you can tell us more about you knife! I don't see anyone else on this channel using pocket knifes so that was a real treat.
Looks like you need a 'mud tub' for your muddy rope. ... That was a nice trade :D
Three perfect tows from the MORR crew.
2:23 That, right there, IS A TOWING EYE.
The shipping tie-downs are the loops of bent steel welded to the chassis somewhere underneath, front and back.
Reason it's still NOT a good idea to recover from a "towing eye" (as Matt well-knows) is because they're really only intended for towing a vehicle along a road and putting a lot of load into one, especially at an angle, can bend it or even snap it off.
Rhetts Famous line, no matter where at in the video….”and Thanks for watching”
When they film a recovery they usually have no idea where that recovery will end up in a video so I'm sure Rhett just does it so in case it's the last recovery in the video it's there. Otherwise, whoever is editing should edit it out.
He stole that line from Ed
Father and son going on a job after working on a project together....that is damned touching ✌🏻
...and having just watched Dances with Wolves the good trade line would have been a perfect edit there 😂
That shovel , being small should be called the shovelette
It's meant to did survival trenches, ala World War I an II style.
If you bend the cable tie over, and cut along the stressed point flush with the square bit, the tie will cut perfectly flush, square and smooth; if your knife is sharp enough, you will not have to saw. No more cable tie spike cuts.
You can employ a similar technique with side cutters: one jaw sliding along the top of the square and the other jaw purchasing on the non catch side, but just using flush cutters work the best.
That Subaru sounded like an old Chevy with all that ticking XD
was going to say that Subie looked to new to have the boxer tick already
burbleburbleburbletickburble - wonderful cars at Scoobys, but they are murder on the wallet
rain is the far part the west. it turns these dirt roads from roads that a boxtruck could drive down with little issue to full on 10/10 trails. in my part of the country the clay never dries so its like this year round unless it does not rain for a full month in the summer
Always makes my day to see a new upload from you guys!
I don't what your fees are, and wouldn't care if I was stuck! Anyway, you guys seem to stay busy. Keep sending the awsome videos, my wife and kids are finally beginning to watch with me. It's helping them see how NOT to get stuck! Always a fan. Kudos!
I own a Subaru and it’s literally called a tow hook. Or in some other models a recovery hook
Had the same thing on my e36 it’s definitely a recovery/tow hook. They put them on so you don’t ruin a bumper pulling the vehicle from underneath
Wow only 45 there, central MN is experiencing a mid winter summer! 51 degrees today!
5:10 Slight mistake, 25 F is -4C and not 4C as written.
32 F = 0 C = freezing point of water !!
@@randomdude7200 Yes exactly, which is how i spotted the mistake as anything below freezing is a negative on the Celsius scale.
The recoveries in this video all went pretty smoothly. glad it did for you all. Stay safe and healthy.
My wife has a Forrester. Always find and push the Traction Control button before attempting to pull it out.
Yep. My Pathfinder is quite capable when you disable the traction control and allow it to just put full power to all the wheels.
This usually works in my fiat. _usually_
Until the CVT overheats and cuts power. Seen that happen too. Subaru is finally figuring out their decades long engine reliability issues, and now they have a whole new breed of issues.
One thing I love to see you do with your nylon ropes, keep them out of the dirt and mud. Killer for nylon ropes. Great job Matt !!!!
I am sure when you get them back to the shop you clean them up. Sand and mud are like sandpaper to the straps.
So we got a call
Howdy my friend
@@JohnFL Howdy back at you...
Oh? what is this? Did Mr. J get first spot? That is amazing.. Good on you.
What will you do with your new found fame and fortune that this title brings?
I think about this often 😔
@@ColinRichardson I was just as surprised as you were, missing good ol' JGEAGLE
Interesting, the Tow/recovery Eyes I've used in UK working in fleet management have all being Left Hand threads. The reason I have been told is that when using a winch cable, the cable under tension try's to untwist and would undue a right hand thread. Also look to have a coarser thread.
Good MORRning everyone!
Good morning 👋
WOOHOO.. Go JJ, Look at you, King of the castle today!
@@ColinRichardson Lol
I just love the whole MORR vibe.... work, play, and Family
They should call those traction boards "False Confidence Truck Ornaments"
Perfect description! I've yet to see these things live up to the hype in real life.
Matt is a natural and creates great content just by being on camera. But his crew delivers too, that's a strong team, great vid.
Goog morning MORR crew!!
Goog morning Rick!
The customers are having a blast, just look at those smiles! 😎🤙🏼 Good Vibe Guys
Whaaaaaat? An off-road recovery channel showing a recovery?? No waaay!!
Thank you Matt and crew. I don’t know whether it was my machine or whether is your your video but the sound for you dropped out and I and you are suck out of sync and in a number of places. Thank you mate thank you guys
MORR team is at it again doing recovery's and Rhett working on the side by side. The Morvair did a recovery and so did Dig Dug!
Someone figured out how to spin the wheels on a Subaru and nobody complained about traction control! Nicely done MORR team
welcome back Matt and all of the other Viewers.
Been big into cars and trucks for over a decade and never once have I heard a single person say that those things are for shipping, tie down, anything other than towing. Call them a tow hook, myself, despite being a ring/eye and not a hook lol.
Hey 👋 from Upstate New York
Hey from Vermont
I always chuckle when I see people dig the wheels out. I mean they're halfway to digging the axles out, (which is what needs to be done) but they just stop.
25°F = minus 4°C Brrrr
Heard ya going racing at the Freedom Factory its gonna be fun times too bad Paul n Robbie n Chad not going
I wonder if, since you are a towing recovery company, if you could get a stash of those tow eyes?
I snagged a few of them out of scrap/salvage yard vehicles and put them on a big carabiner.
Good idea. Maybe they could go online and find out what size different cars use . On a video a few years ago Matt talked about how they only work on a straight pull . The little eye bolt will snap if any pressure is put on the side
R.sole( junkyard )✓ I didn't even think about that.
Hey Tom If you toe anymore Z71 Off road package For the Silverado Z71Is guaranteed to be 4 wheel drive Z71Even have leather seats To help clean up mud.
Got a call
The bumper on that tacoma has D-rings.. they are more than strong enough to pull it out. done it many times same bumper, same style.. the one I have is slightly different, but definitly strong enough for a kinetic recovery. its got a winch plate on it capable of a 10,000-12,000lb winch...
The customer asked me not to pull on the D-rings so I rigged up another way.
I got my Subaru Ascent stuck in sand. AWD is not 4WD
Facts
And a driver isn't necessarily a good driver....
True, but honestly, owning an ascent and 4x4 jeep, I think Subaru did a good enough job with the symmetrical AWD that that isn't the limiting factor most of the time - the only time we've run into issues with our ascent in the sand when the jeep was able to do it was when we've got it heavily packed (luggage, people) or when we used to run stock height and normal tires. With our tires and the 2" lift the thing is a boss!
It’s not. But disabling traction control will do wonders.
@@JimYeats oh yeah, for anyone else who owns an ascent, on the interior fuse panel pull the fuse on the very bottom in the middle. Make sure you do it while the vehicle isn't in park because it won't let you shift out of it while the fuse is pulled. Drive around for a moment and slowly, everything traction control related will stop working, including eyesight. Works well for deep sand if you have good throttle control (account for turbo lag sometimes) or snow drifting. Otherwise, x-mode does a great job and does allow wheel slip
Working out of town this week in Denver. Got back to the hotel tonight and there is a Subaru in the parking lot with the tie eye installed and a bow shackle hanging from it!
I'm kind of impressed that Subaru has a mode which allows the wheels to spin that much. They have some engineers who know what they're doing.
Most newer AWD vehicles have a button that allows you to turn off traction control, and that will just put full power to all wheels.
In my moderately limited experience, @@JimYeats, they seldom *fully* disable it.
They are legendary for their AWD system for a good reason. Own an Outback myself and I'm very very happy with it, always feel safe in the road and know it will take me forth under any weather condition, or well, at least the conditions thrown at me where I live, haha.
@@WolfMimirMori my AWD Pilot is a beast in the deep snow and mud when I turn traction control off
@@Aggressive_Splooge The Pilot has always been surprisingly capable off-road
I watched one of your videos from 5 months ago where you picked up the front of a vehicle with the wrecker and dead pulled it out of the woods for a few miles with a missing right front tire. You used your red nylon straps with the black kevlar outer protective cover. Those straps are great, but as a union ironworker of 35 yrs. That black protective cover can get cut. What we would do for an added layer of protection like you have in cases where you are hooking up to the frame. Like when the strap is going to slide up to a V in the frame or just have a sharp edge. We would take an old strap that has been cut and can not use anymore. Cut out the bad section and then cut up the rest in 1 foot, 2 foot even 4 foot sections to put under our good red straps to make sure they did not get cut or damaged. Trust me, those red straps with the black kevlar cut get cut. Especially the way you haul with a swinging load and not constant pressure on each strap. Just an added layer of protection, those red kevlar protected strap are not cheap.
P.S. If you use a 2 inch red strap, use and piece of old 4 inch old strap as a softner. Some times you need to roll the softner over the front edge for a pinch point. You get the idea.