No truer word ever spoken...
In my many years experience it is usually driving skill and experience rather than vehicle that causes problems...
Many years ago I worked in a sand mine on Stradbroke Island, Qld. My 4WD experience owning up till then had been Suzuki 2-stroke (1976 3 cyl 540cc) then 1981 Suzuki Sierra then '83 Subaru. Now using Bob's system I took that Subaru places where we watched RR's getting bogged from the top of the hill (eg Fraser Island in 1983) and smiled quietly as we lent them our shovel.
So, consider my delight in getting a mining company vehicle - Hilux with BFG tyres. Company policy was to run them with 18psi in the tyres at all times, so cornering on bitumen was a bit ****y, but I couldn't stop the thing in sand. Funny thing was, everyone else at work had landcruisers (still 40 series in those days) and no one ever wanted to borrow the 'lux. Because when they did, they inevitably got it bogged and had to be dug out with a big sand-digging front-end loader.
My theory has always been that in a land cruiser you never learn any 4wd skills, the things are so competent off road that you don't know if you are driving one very badly. So if you get in a hilux you might be in trouble, what with only a 2l motor instead of 4.2 etc etc. On the other hand, if you learn your 4wd skills in something that was comfortable to drive in but doesn't have the clearance etc (eg my subaru) and you get into a hilux then you can't go wrong.
Moral of the story, what Bob said, but hey, I like telling stories...
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