So I looked this one up. It is historically interesting, and while a set of these would be very helpful when bogged, I'm not sure they really suit the average traveller:
"A single piece weighed about 66 pounds (30kg) and was
10 ft (3.0 m) long by 15 in (0.38 m) wide."
To say that MaxTrax are unoriginal is akin to saying that the iPhone is really nothing but a fancy wind-up payphone. The TRED is more like an 'iPone' that you might pick up on eBay from Hong Kong, it looks the same, and is trading on someone else's intellectual prowess, but is essentially inferior.
I have noticed that there are two alternate, and incompatible, views in the world regarding the purchase of just about anything. In the one group are those that save for the best. They might make do when they can't afford the best, but they appreciate that buying better in the beginning saves money in the long run; also time, headaches, and when it comes to remote travel, maybe lives.
The second group always buys the cheapest: those plastic boxes for $12 that smash on the first trip away, the knock-off of whatever 4WD product is big this week, the GIC camper, any camera but a Nikon or Canon, the 3L Patrols from a decade ago. They will try to convince you (and themselves) of their wisdom, foresight and savings, but in the long run, old proverbs run true:
The fool buys everything twice.Truth is all these plastic mats are just a modern day version of "marsden matting" anybody claiming any originality is full of if.
if I could still get original marsden mats I would. Google marsden mat's they built airfields out of them during ww2.