We use the Ranger primarily for work projects, but took it out in heavy snow while looking for a Christmas tree and it was unbelievable. Flip a switch and it's full six-wheel drive. I got it stuck in about four feet of snow that the county plows had blocked our driveway with up at our cabin. The dump bed gets a lot of use. We were told it was Area 51 surplus that was used to rescue downed pilots.
The quad doesn't get much use yet, bought it last fall and then upgraded and painted it and such, but it did rescue me a couple of times when my Jeep shut down while testing just outside of town. Had to walk home and drive my tools back, then tow it home behind the Jeep.
My buddy has 200 acres on the edge of our small town that has some challenging rock bluffs and the like, so I'd run the Jeep over for testing at times. It was 'new to me' so I really didn't know how offroad worthy it was. I was having electrical issues with the HEI ignition, as well as float issues with the carb at steep angles, so I had to diagnose that and dial it in. Upgraded all of the electronics in the HEI distributor.
While testing, I ran it over to climb out of that little wash that you see. It was mid-winter, around 20*, and even what would normally be soft ground was frozen solid, rock hard. I'd never experienced that before. I ran though a small drainage before climbing the bank, figuring my hitch might drag a bit but figured it would just claw through the dirt.
No such thing. It was like plowing across concrete, and lifted my rear tires off the ground before stalling where you see it in the pics. Couldn't dig out, ground was too hard, so had to jack it up and fill under the rear tires. I wasn't too impressed! Not only was it hung on the hitch, but on the spare tire as well.
I've since removed the bumper hitch and raised the spare tire. I'll build a custom hitch up under the frame.
The red pic is the day I brought it home last winter.