Back story.. Last winter I got too close to the edge of the road avoiding a snow laden tree overhanging the road. I ended up in a frozen swamp next to the road.
The way the county snowplows work in NW Wisconsin you can't see where the pavement stops, and the side of the road starts. It looks like a perfectly crowned sheet of road. The snowplows blade extends 4 feet or more over the road's edge. Anyway, once my right tires "fell off" the pavement edge, which was about a 10" drop, the deeper snow sucked me off the road. I was going about 35 MPH.
I was stuck. Really stuck. I locked the rear axle, and in 4Hi or 4Low and my 35" aggressive tires, it did nothing. Tires were on ice, truck frame on snow. I was about 3/4 of a mile from home and it was at night, so I left my truck there overnight, I didn't feel much like winching in the dark at about zero degrees F.
Winched my truck out the next day. My wheels were filled with packed-in snow. Ever drive a car or truck with snow packed into the wheels? If so, you know it's like driving on unbalanced tires. So, I sprayed the wheels with RV antifreeze the next afternoon, and it worked. Most of the snow came out of the wheels.
Fast forward to this past summer. My wheels and tires look amazingly clean. The tires almost look like I sprayed that tire-black stuff on them. So, I was thinking about the cheap price of RV antifreeze, and maybe it has other uses. Such as a cheap window washing fluid for a sub-zero lifestyle.
Thank you for your replies.
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