2WD GMC 2500HD

   / 2WD GMC 2500HD #62  
I've lived in the lake snow belt in Indiana all my life. I've seen mostly 2wd vehicles most of my life. 4x4 trucks were very rare until mud-bogging came about in the 80's. I've seen exactly one(1) set of tire chains on a vehicle here in 60 years.
Yep, but a 2wd truck with a heavy diesel motor means that rear wheel traction is poor. I’m willing to bet that the 2wd trucks you are familiar with had gasser motors.
 
   / 2WD GMC 2500HD #63  
You can try and brush it off as city living, but we were out in the county most of the time where drifts were common. 4wd just wasn't on most trucks back then and no one used chains.
Heavy diesel motors also weren’t common back then. The diesels are so heavy that there is limited traction on rear wheels.
 
   / 2WD GMC 2500HD #64  
It proves that very few 2wd pickups in America actually had a set of chains back then. Very few. Yes, they were probably common in certain areas, but they are far fewer than "every". Most people we knew with 2wd pickups, and cars for that matter, just threw a bunch of heavy stuff in the bed or in the trunk in winter and off we went.

Now studded snow tires WERE quite common around here. My father had them for all of his vehicles up until the late 70's, and he'd have to have them swapped around spring and fall. I recall pretty much everyone's dad going through the same ritual.
And very few trucks had diesel motors back then
 
   / 2WD GMC 2500HD #65  
And very few trucks had diesel motors back then
Heavy diesel motors also weren’t common back then. The diesels are so heavy that there is limited traction on rear wheels.
None of which explains the very large number of 2wd diesel 3/4 and ton trucks running around the Southeast. Thousands of them.
Maybe these boys just know how to drive.

Before you start in remember the OP is from VA.
 
   / 2WD GMC 2500HD #66  
Like others have said, with 2wd you just need to know its limit and drive accordingly. I had a 86 full size Ford van, extended length and a 2001 extra long GMC full size van in the northern Michigan snow belt. Drove them both all year round with no problems. I had 4 or 5 5gal pails of sand at the back doors for weight. Jon
 
   / 2WD GMC 2500HD #67  
Yep, but a 2wd truck with a heavy diesel motor means that rear wheel traction is poor. I’m willing to bet that the 2wd trucks you are familiar with had gasser motors.
A D-max is 835lbs and the 8.1 gasser is 863lbs
The diesel is actually lighter
 
   / 2WD GMC 2500HD #68  
A D-max is 835lbs and the 8.1 gasser is 863lbs
The diesel is actually lighter
Both of those motors are heavy enough that rear wheel traction would be limited. Moss Road was referring to old school 350 v8 motors that were much lighter.
 
   / 2WD GMC 2500HD #69  
A 2004 4x4 Dodge I owned with a Cummins stuck in the mud. I could move it back and forth several feet but couldn’t climb out of the ruts. Another 4x4 pickup wouldn’t pull it out, it took a full sized JD TLB to get it out.
 

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   / 2WD GMC 2500HD #70  
Both of those motors are heavy enough that rear wheel traction would be limited. Moss Road was referring to old school 350 v8 motors that were much lighter.
I had a 1978 GMC full size bed pickup truck. 2wd. 454. That engine weighs around 700#. With no weight in the back, it was a donut machine on dry pavement, let alone snow. However, throw some weight between the tailgate and wheel wells, and it was fine in winter on streets.
 

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