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Raportează o problemă de traducere
But it still has its use that way. Thanks for the comment Grimm.
pic:
https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2907323764
As for the Old-Timers, I don't think I even own the DLC. It's been quite a while since the last time I played.
If you have a truck with the American Wilds flatbed trailer AND a scout vehicle with the Old-Timers Scout Trailer attached, you can actually stick the two together somewhat, if aligned properly. If the Scout Trailer is centered at the rear of the trailer with the attachment point sticking out between the flatbed's ramps, the Scout Trailer's axles will keep it from being pulled through the opening, and you can drag a scout behind the flatbed trailer. This can come in handy if you need to transport something that takes up the whole trailer (e.g. Western Star 6900XD), as well as a scout.
Here's a picture that hopefully gets the idea across: https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2850442943
The best way to do it is to winch the uphill side of the truck to a tree a bit ahead of the truck. Drive forward while constantly pulling the winch in, until you are aligned with or slightly ahead of the tree. WITHOUT disconnecting the winch, connect the uphill side of the truck to another tree about a truck-length ahead, and IMMEDIATELY start driving and pulling in the winch. Rinse and repeat until the ground is flat enough to no longer risk rolling the truck.
Here's a screenshot of a B-66 employing this tactic to navigate a steep riverbank: https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2848709521
the ability to limit speeds is only useful for keyboard players where you're unable to 'feather' the throttle like you can with a controller or wheel. this helps with mud crawling as the spinning wheels start to dig holes, but easing off the gas (most of the time) causes the wheels to climb instead of spin