Yes, lower tire pressure certainly helps soften the ride, not as jarring.
My closest neighbor lives about 2/3rds of a mile away and often runs our common dirt road at 45 mph or greater. My land is at the junction with a narrow but paved county road, and fortunately my gate is 250’ from the junction. Needless to say, there are some killer washboards between my property and his. He owns a tractor with a box scraper and occasionally drags the road; the county grades it annually. He gets a lot of UPS and Fed Ex deliveries and they fly down the road also. When I drive the road between my place and his, it’s often intolerable in either my 4Runner or Outback at ~5 mph. He has a late model GMC Sierra and Yukon, and I can hear either rattle and squeak most of the distance between us as he or his wife come my way to access the roads to town.
My closest neighbor lives about 2/3rds of a mile away and often runs our common dirt road at 45 mph or greater. My land is at the junction with a narrow but paved county road, and fortunately my gate is 250’ from the junction. Needless to say, there are some killer washboards between my property and his. He owns a tractor with a box scraper and occasionally drags the road; the county grades it annually. He gets a lot of UPS and Fed Ex deliveries and they fly down the road also. When I drive the road between my place and his, it’s often intolerable in either my 4Runner or Outback at ~5 mph. He has a late model GMC Sierra and Yukon, and I can hear either rattle and squeak most of the distance between us as he or his wife come my way to access the roads to town.
DAW
~When You Live in Nevada, "just down the road" is anywhere in the line of sight within the curvature of the earth.
~When You Live in Nevada, "just down the road" is anywhere in the line of sight within the curvature of the earth.