That is not off road activity. You are on a surface that even a Toyota Vitz can be capable of traversing with ease. Actually typical rural road surfaces
Our rural roads are paved with asphalt. What is the steepest grade percentage shown in this video if you are so seemingly informed? Hint, that first exterior shot is about 100 feet in elevation change
@@CFloPhotography I am not so informed sir but in my rural area, that surface is part of the feeder road irrespective of the slope gradient. My concern is calling the activity offroad which to my understanding is going off the beaten path.
@@isaiahnyandega5318 What constitutes between offroading and "going off the beaten path", in your opinion? Considering that even popular traditional "off-road" pathways are labeled as "forests roads, jeep trails, fire roads, etc." and often are "highway legal vehicles only ." This trail is marked as a "Jeep Trail" by the USGS. True offroading to me, begins in places that are open to non-highway highway vehicles. I mentioned opinion because that's all it really is and to not make that distincation can come across as a bit judgmental. This video has likes and dislikes. The definitition of "off roading" is relative to one's experience.
not sure you actually needed the c diff locked
It’s a test run for a new car. Definitely want to test all the lockers for fun
That is not off road activity. You are on a surface that even a Toyota Vitz can be capable of traversing with ease. Actually typical rural road surfaces
Our rural roads are paved with asphalt. What is the steepest grade percentage shown in this video if you are so seemingly informed? Hint, that first exterior shot is about 100 feet in elevation change
@@CFloPhotography I am not so informed sir but in my rural area, that surface is part of the feeder road irrespective of the slope gradient. My concern is calling the activity offroad which to my understanding is going off the beaten path.
@@isaiahnyandega5318 What constitutes between offroading and "going off the beaten path", in your opinion? Considering that even popular traditional "off-road" pathways are labeled as "forests roads, jeep trails, fire roads, etc." and often are "highway legal vehicles only ." This trail is marked as a "Jeep Trail" by the USGS. True offroading to me, begins in places that are open to non-highway highway vehicles.
I mentioned opinion because that's all it really is and to not make that distincation can come across as a bit judgmental. This video has likes and dislikes. The definitition of "off roading" is relative to one's experience.