I met Mike the 80 owner on the Saturday trip. Talking to him on Saturday he was telling me hes also got a Suzuki Vitara that is his
off road toy. I told him that I had 5 previous to my cruiser and that they were heavily modified.
Anyway.......................He invited me out with him and the Suzuki club the very next day to Telangi State Forest.
8am I arrived at his and we set off. We stopped at a bakery to buy lunch.
My ride for the day.
We drove to Telangi and waited for the others.
A beautiful Sierra turned up running 35" BFG Krawler tyres.
Followed by another chap in a stock standard white Sierra.
Another Vitara turned up.
We aired down and hit the tracks.
We passed a beautiful 40 series.
What amazed me was how much Telangi had changed! Last time the tracks were hard and dusty, but this time after a weeks rain they were slick, and muddy with plenty of water filled ruts!
We stopped at the bottom of one of the steep hill climbs to choose a line.
The guy with the beautiful original white Sierra left his truck at the forest carpark and jumped in the green beast.
The green Sierra picked a difficult line and after sitting there with all 4 wheels slowly turning (lockers and crawler gears), decided to try a different route up the hill.
The other Vit next, who also picked an easier but still tough line.
Mikes Vit next.
With the locked rear end and the front air locker engaged and loads of right foot he flew up.
When we got to the next section a Patrol had just been snatch recovered out of the water filled
ruts.
All the Zukes made it through without issue!
Next we headed up and down some crazily muddy and slippery hills. With the thick, greasy clay being as slippery as it was we were merely passengers for a lot of it. Great fun! but not something I would want to risk doing in an expensive truck.
At the top of one climb we spotted a stuck Disco trying to winch himself up.
I helped with rigging his winch line to different trees so he could get up the hill.
And finally up.
We stopped for lunch and I admired the green Sierra! The thing just screams FUN!
A nice 70 tray back drove past and stopped to help a mate out whos patrol was having engine problems.
He left his door open and I spotted an internal roll cage, so I went over and spoke to the guy about it and got a closer look. It doesnt actually take up as much room in the cab as I thought it might.
Definitely something I want for mine.
One thing I did notice was that his wasnt bolted to the chassis, something I thought was meant to be done. The guy said that because the body and chassis move separately, slightly, you cant bolt through the floor to the chassis.
The next hill descent was crazy!
We waited at the top for a while and then got the OK over the radio to come down.
Then we got a call over the radio to say stop! The other Vit has slipped off the track.
The owner (feel bad I cant remember anyones names.) Didn't feel confident in being able to safely move the Vit and get down the hill safely.
I dont blame him. It might not look bad in the pics but seriously the ground was so slippy it was difficult to walk on and stay upright. It was like ice!
So Mr green Sierra jumped in and managed to back it up and spin it round beautifully.
I wish I'd got a video of the next bit because it looked insane! He edged slowly towards the edge then voooommmm he was off! He slid for maybe 50-60 meters with absolutely no traction bouncing up and over the bumpy terrain trying to steer the thing straight.
It looked mad!
Certainly the most insane bit of 4wding I've seen for a long time.
Our turn next!
It was equally as mad and I dont think I stopped smiling and laughing until the bottom of the hill. Watching Mike having to quickly steer lock to lock trying to correct the truck sliding all over the place and keep the thing straight was awesome to watch.
We stopped for a bit at the bottom and another group of 4wd's turned up and one of the guys attempted to drive up it and failed.
Mr green Sierra decided to have a go and I asked if I could jump in. It was so much fun being in the Sierra as it bounced, slid and clawed its was up this crazily steep, ice rink of a hill.
Next Mike wanted to have a go in his Vit, which was also incredible fun!
We managed to get up to where the Vit slid off the track, and then backed back down. Reaching that point proved we would be able to get to the top if we so wished, as the bottom section was the steepest.
Then Mike asked if I wanted a go and he would film it.
So I explained I would love to but what happens if I roll it, or hit a tree or break something.
He said mate dont worry about it. If you roll it or hit a tree it will give me an excuse to trayback it. And if it breaks dont worry, its just a toy thats what its for!
So flat out in 1st, 2nd and 3rd low, with both axles fully locked and the crawler gears working hard, I screamed my way up the hill. The needle was bouncing off the rev limiter at times as I tried my hardest to get up the hill.
Great fun!
Now I was driving it hard, but that was how Mike had been driving it, so I wasnt being too rough.
I got up and backed back down. When I reached the bottom I tried moving forward on full lock when there was an almighty BANG!!!
The Vit's weakest link is always the front CV's, and that was what I had just blown.
I backed down the track.
We then removed the broken piece of shaft to prevent it jumping out and jamming the steering.
Mike examining the broken CV.
I felt bad but he wasnt bothered and said he was waiting for that one to break. Hes having some custom made front shafts built which should be ready anyday now.
When we got back to his he showed me a few bits on his beautiful 80.
More LED self adhesive lighting strips under the bonnet, switched on by a little spring switch when you open the bonnet.
He had been telling me about his lline lockers. He was telling me how the handbrake is shit off road and to overcome this he has fitted line lockers.
So when hes off road and needs to winch someone else for example, he can lock all his brakes and be a considerable distance from his truck with his wireless winch remote winching.
On the Saturday tripi when he winched the stuck Patrol out of the bog hole people couldnt understand why he was out of his truck yet it wasnt being dragged towards the Patrol but instead was sat perfectly still pulling the Patrol towards it.
So its a little solenoid that sits in the brake lines.
You put your foot on the brake peddle and hold the peddle where you want it. You then flick a switch and the solenoid locks the brakes at that pressure.
Another mod I spotted and asked him about was his engine oil vapor breather tube, which I noticed had taps on it and extra hoses.
He explained that once he was out 4wding and after trying repeatedly to get up a steep hill, he switched the truck off and it kept running. It over ran.
It was running on the oil vapor which gets blown back into the air intake for cleaner emissions.
So hes fitted a a Y section to split the hose coming off the rocker cover in 2. After the hoses split theyve both got taps on them.
So normally the engine oil vapor just exits out of the new hose and gets blown out under the truck. Meaning his engine isnt running on dirty hot engine oil vapor.
But when he comes to do a deep, potentially bonnet deep river crossing he closes that tap and opens the other tap, so once again the vapor is being shot into his airbox.
He then showed me his water to air intercooler and explained how it works.
There is a small coolant bottle against the passenger side of the bulk head/fire wall. This feeds coolant to the radiator like structure inside the intercooler pipe on top of the engine.
The hot coolant is then pumped to a small radiator behind the front grill next to the drivers side headlight.
His 80 is blowing a bit of black smoke under heavy load so hes taking it to a specialist diesel tuner soon to have it dyno'd, the fuel pump rebuilt, new injectors and then the fueling and boost setup, and then finally it willl go back on the dyno to see how much more power has been gained.
I've mentioned to him that I want an 80 and he was telling me that 24valves fetch almost twice that of a 12valve.
So I may look at importing one, possibly from the UK. Just need to do the maths and work it out.
Next trip is in a few weeks time. A full weekend 4x4ing and camping in the high country again.
But got loads of work to do on LJ before then!
