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AdventureTaco - turbodb's build and adventures

Discussion in '1st Gen. Builds (1995-2004)' started by turbodb, Apr 4, 2017.

  1. Feb 28, 2019 at 9:06 PM
    #1741
    Speedytech7

    Speedytech7 Toyota Cult Ombudsman

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    I've done a mod or two
    That's just the internet my man, it's safe to assume most folks will only read 10% of what you write, the ones who respond are the ones that read more than that... And then there's Monte...
    All those short atten
     
  2. Feb 28, 2019 at 9:37 PM
    #1742
    Reh5108

    Reh5108 Well-Known Member

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    I believe what you are referring to as ABS sensor is an airbag sensor. Nothing to do with antilock brake system.

    Yellow wires indicate that it has something to do with the SRS (supplemental restraint system). Recently, it took me a while to find anything on the airbag system in the manual because I didn't realize it was labeled as that.
     
    turbodb[OP] and Speedytech7 like this.
  3. Mar 4, 2019 at 6:43 AM
    #1743
    turbodb

    turbodb [OP] AdventureTaco

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    AdventureTaco
    Yep, you're totally right. I knew that and the error was between the keyboard and screen. Fixed, thx.
     
    Reh5108[QUOTED] likes this.
  4. Mar 5, 2019 at 7:42 AM
    #1744
    turbodb

    turbodb [OP] AdventureTaco

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    AdventureTaco
    Hiking Death Valley (Feb 2019) Part 1

    The Day the Tent Closed...with Us Inside
    February 13, 2019.

    Before it even began, the trip was off to a rough start. See, we'd planned - if you can call deciding to go on a trip just a few days prior to departure, "planning" - to leave two weeks earlier, but inclement weather caused us to push the trip back. Even so, the weather report was iffy just a few days before the new date - something we decided we'd ignore so we could get out and explore.

    Plus, by pushing the date, we'd gotten a couple of friends - Ben @m3bassman, Zane @Speedytech7, and Mikey @pizzaviolence to join @mrs.turbodb and me on this adventure - no small feat since the plan was to do something completely different than normal - spend the vast majority of our time out of the trucks, hiking some of the beautiful canyons that the Death Valley desert has to offer.

    So it was that on the morning of February 13, we packed up the truck and headed south - happy to escape the snow that had enveloped the Seattle area for the previous two weeks, hoping that the weather we'd find ourselves in was more inviting.

    [​IMG]

    Now, getting to Death Valley is never a quick operation - for us, it's a 19-20 hour ordeal through the back-woods of Oregon and Nevada, with a stop for the night somewhere around the latitude of Reno - approximately 15 hours from home. This trip was no exception - in fact, the cold weather we were running from at home had an even stronger grip as we made our way south - snow, rain, and a headwind making us question if we had really made the right decision.

    We did get to see this Toyota Truck - outfitted with a Wildernest - as we passed through Oregon. And he was pretty excited to see us.

    [​IMG]

    With stops only for fuel and food, we pushed on. Our destination was just south of Fallon, NV, where we were going to meet up with Ben and Mikey for a few hours of sleep, and then make the final push to Death Valley early the next morning. And so it was that around 1:00am, we rolled into camp - a camp on the side of a hill that, despite the early, hour we could see from literally miles away. See, the rain had (thankfully) stopped and having arrived a half hour earlier, Ben had turned on not only his headlights, but also his Hellas and what we like to refer to as his "small collapsed sun," (aka his bro bar) to guide us in.

    [​IMG]
    Not actually Ben. He's got more lights.

    There were warm greetings all around as @mrs.turbodb and I got the tent setup and then we all quickly agreed that rather than leaving at 5:30am, a better start time might be 6:30am - that extra hour of warm sleep a welcome end to a long day. As we got cozy under the covers, the wind whipped around the tent, but we didn't care. We put in our earplugs and closed our eyes, the new Exped MegaMat 10 Duo LXW - brand new on this trip to replace the ageing foam mattress - so comfy that we were nearly instantly asleep.

    The wind not only continued through the night, it picked up steam. A few times, it lifted the fold-out part of the tent a few inches off the ground but nothing I hadn't experienced in the Henry Mountains a few months before. But then, at 4:57am, a strong gust must have caught the tent at just the right angle and WHAP, the entire tent folded up with us inside! Well, not completely, since we were still in there, but the floor of the tent was now sticking vertically in the air, and we'd been completely thrown onto the other half of the tent floor - not a good situation!

    I quickly got the tent re-deployed, and a quick visual inspection showed the only thing hurt to be our egos, so we flipped the bedding around to put most of our weight on the fold-out side and tried to go back to sleep, hoping that the adrenaline coursing through our bodies would give us another hour of shut-eye before we had to get up and on our way.

    Alas, it wasn't to be - about 15 minutes later, we heard the rain - which had held off all night - start, and it was furious. Blown sideways by the driving wind, everything was soaked within minutes. Ben was out of his tent at this point, quickly putting it away, and we soon followed - it was clear that we weren't going to be getting any more sleep.

    Both of us were luckier than Mikey, who was sleeping in a ground tent, and who later related to us that he "thought the tent was working great, until I realized that my sleeping pad was just soaking up all the water."
    :annoyed:

    And so it was that by 6:00am, we were on the road - once again in heavy rain - to Death Valley.


    - - - - -

    We Luck Out and It's Beautiful
    February 14, 2019.

    Despite the weather, we made good time heading south. There aren't many towns in this part of Nevada, so we stopped where we could for fuel, ate breakfast as we drove, and caught up over the CB radio. By 8:00am we were nearing Hawthorne, NV and the then a couple hours later, Tonopah and Goldfield.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    If the weather had been nicer, and if we'd had a bit more time, I always recommend stopping in Goldfield for the Enchanted International Car Forest (photos) (more photos), but neither weather nor time were cooperative today and so we pushed on to Beatty where we got our last fuel before heading into the park.

    It's here that I feel obligated to note that the Arco station in Beatty now accepts credit cards - a welcome convenience given the (relatively) cheap price of fuel for the area, now without having to remember cash!

    All fueled up, we headed into the park. "Welcome to the hottest, driest place on earth." said Ben over the radio. It was raining, and visibility was well under one mile.

    [​IMG]

    And, just as we took our first photos, we all got the following notification over our cell phones. "Just perfect" given our plan to hike up a canyon.

    [​IMG]

    Luckily - we hoped - for us, we still had a couple hours to drive before meeting up with Zane for our first hike. Fingers crossed, it wouldn't be raining near Jubilee Pass - or if it was, it'd just be a light, intermittent, drizzle. So we pointed the trucks that direction and made reasonably good time - the weather reducing the number of stops we made for photos.

    Of course, it's not every day you see significant amounts of water in Badwater Basin, so we made a few stops along the way to capture the event as best we could.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    Eventually, and right around lunch time, we found Zane. He'd arrived just a few minutes earlier - his trip up from the south a shorter one - and was putzing around the trailhead, eavesdropping on our CB chatter as we approached. Unfortunately, it was still raining quite hard at this point and so even our quick greetings resulted in 5 very wet campers. We climbed back into the trucks and continued the conversation over the radios.

    [​IMG]

    All hungry for lunch, we decided that the first order of business was to eat, and then we'd figure out what we wanted to do about the hike. So we ventured back out into the downpour and got sandwiches assembled before retreating to the trucks once again for consumption. But lunch could only delay the inevitable for so long, and soon we decided that having come this far, and with no rain in the forecast for the remainder of the trip (so we could dry out our stuff), that there was no real reason not to go on the hike.

    I suggested to my better half that she wear only the minimal clothing necessary - essentially a shell - so that there was as little to dry out as possible, and with that we locked up the trucks on the side of the road (the "trailhead") and set off on foot.

    Now, and astute reader may have noticed that I have yet to mention where we were actually going on this hike. It turns out, there was no trail where we were going - rather, we were headed cross-country, up an alluvial fan, and into Kaleidoscope Canyon.

    [​IMG]

    As with many of the hikes on this trip, this one was inspired by @DVexile, who's adventures in Death Valley always leave me wishing I was a fly on the window of his truck. In fact, he and I had hoped to meet on this very trail two weeks earlier - he wrapping up a trip to the park, and I just starting - alas, the weather throwing a wrench into those plans.

    Just a few minutes into our trek, a stroke of luck - the rain began tapering off! We all looked at each other - hesitant to mention a word lest the weather gods take their revenge - and continued on, taking in the scenery as we neared the entrance to the canyon, vivid from the recent rain.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    Little did we know at this point that everything we were seeing was - at best - just "meh" compared to what we were about to experience in Kaleidoscope itself. As such, we were continually stopping to take photos of the spectacular surroundings.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    Along the way, we ran into these little shrubs that reminded us of the "layered" trees you might see in Hawaii, tropical rain-forests, or Africa - just miniaturized to about 12" tall.

    [​IMG]

    And bright red cotton-top cactus, clinging to the sides of the canyon.

    [​IMG]

    And then, we started - just started - to get into the geology of the place. Here, a fault line in the rock as clear as day - where the orange and white layers of stone are no longer aligned - so cool to see in such an obvious way.

    [​IMG]

    And a humongous fold, where some sort of geologic activity caused all kinds of craziness to happen - a U-shaped fold filled in by additional (vertical) layers, then sheared off at a 45º angle at the 8 o'clock position where even more layers of earth remained horizontal.

    [​IMG]

    And we started to see color. Both close up, and far away. Yes, this was going to be special.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    It is at this point that I must warn you - the reader - that I am going to run out of ways to describe this place to you. I'll continue to try, but it will be impossible for me to do so without repeating myself about the color and beauty that it holds. The photos too may seem slightly repetitive - each one different views into the same Kaleidoscope. It's not that I'm sorry about any of this - quite the opposite - but I felt it necessary to warn you up front :).

    As we entered Kaleidoscope Canyon proper, the oranges and reds began to pop.

    [​IMG]

    And little bits of blue sky started to make themselves known. It was at this point that @mrs.turbodb, who had suggested that perhaps it wasn't the "best idea" to go on the hike in the rain looked over and mentioned how it seemed to be working out just fine!

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    We continued up the canyon, turn after turn - each time thinking that we must have reached the apex of the experience, only to realized that no - it continued to get better - the colors getting more varied and vibrant all the time.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    A hike like this really is a special thing - it's an experience you never want to end, and yet one that you're worried might go on forever. If that were the case, it one would have to tear themselves away from the splendor to eat and sleep - and no one in their right mind would want that.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    It wasn't just the colors at this point - we were once again looking at the geology of the place. Palisades, with boulders delicately balanced on their tops, a huge, black, V-shaped fold in an otherwise orange wall. Spectacular.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    We continued. We stopped. Turn after turn. Over and over again.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    Eventually we did reach the apex of the trek. We continued on past this point by scrambling up several sets of dry falls - just to make sure we weren't missing anything - the canyon continuing up into the mountainside, before deciding that it'd probably be a good idea to start heading back, so we could get to camp before dark. But not before we snapped a few more photos that were sure to be different than all the rest.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    As we headed back down the canyon, the weather continued to get nicer. The sun was poking through the clouds more and more, illuminating the colors in the canyon - making our exit out of the canyon even more enjoyable than our entrance into it. So amazing when we thought back to how we'd started our trek in a downpour!

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    At the mouth of the canyon as we could see the sun streaking down into Death Valley, I looked back to capture it one more time - such a special place, and one that I was glad we'd taken the time to hike, rather than just driving by as we usually do!

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    And then, we headed down the alluvial fan to our awaiting trucks. It wouldn't be the last time on this trip that we'd measure our progress by how tiny the trucks were in the distance.

    [​IMG]

    When we finally got back it was nearly 5:45pm, and yet we were more energized than we'd been when we'd started. As we piled into the trucks, I let everyone know that our destination for the evening - Rhodes Spring - wasn't far away, and that we should be there in 15-20 minutes.

    Up and over Jubilee Pass, then a bit of dirt, and we were there. And we were just in time to take in the cabin with the last of the daylight.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    The cabin was in amazingly good shape, so we explored a bit - though we left the bulk of our exploration for the following morning, wanting to setup camp before dark - this time more cognizant of the wind direction - not wanting a repeat of the night before. :rofl:

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    As the sun dropped below the clouds, we were treated to a perfect end to a glorious day - the long rays glowing orange across the bottoms of the clouds and top of the desert. There isn't much more that you can ask for than a setting like this if you ask me.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    And then, as the last of the light faded on the horizon - and a glorious pink illuminated the sky - we prepped dinner (tacos and guacamole) and gathered between the trucks, sheltered from the wind, to reflect on the day.

    [​IMG]

    It hadn't been like anything we'd expected - it'd been better. We'd seen so much and yet it was only the first of three days we planned to spend wandering off into the desert in search of sights not visible from any road. Glorious!

    Without a camp fire (none are allowed in the park), tired from the night before and our hike that afternoon, and knowing we were going to do it all again the next day, we hit the sack early - Mikey braving the hammock life even with inclement weather - suspending his between Ben and Zane's trucks.

    We weren't sure what was in store for us the next day, but we knew one thing - this was just the start to a trip that would be like no other!
     
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  5. Mar 5, 2019 at 8:20 AM
    #1745
    Blackdawg

    Blackdawg Dr. Frankenstein

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    Thought you'd have learned to sleep on the ladder side in bad weather after Utah..haha
     
    JasonLee and turbodb[OP] like this.
  6. Mar 5, 2019 at 8:29 AM
    #1746
    tundraconvert

    tundraconvert Well-Known Member

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    Love your reports and photos...so inspiring.
     
    MFTAF13 and turbodb[OP] like this.
  7. Mar 5, 2019 at 8:58 AM
    #1747
    Wolftaco0503

    Wolftaco0503 Well-Known Member

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    Great Pics and story
     
    turbodb[OP] likes this.
  8. Mar 5, 2019 at 9:26 AM
    #1748
    Prayn4surf

    Prayn4surf 20 minutes late

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    This made me laugh hysterically, mostly it reminded me of all of the backpacking trips I had been on that my father talked me into. Who would undersell the miles, and when I asked where the trail head was, he would point at a mountain haha. It is better that way, and always rewarding taking the "road less traveled". Was hoping for a DV trip this year, but I have other trips planned. Great write up, February was a very wet and windy month for CA...even in the desert.
     
  9. Mar 5, 2019 at 10:22 AM
    #1749
    1Fine40

    1Fine40 Well-Known Member

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    Wow!! Those colors on camera are amazing...bet in person it was even more impressive! Thanks ever so much for sharing:thumbsup:.
     
    turbodb[OP] likes this.
  10. Mar 5, 2019 at 10:45 AM
    #1750
    turbodb

    turbodb [OP] AdventureTaco

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    AdventureTaco
    Hahahaha, don't accuse me of intelligence - we still aren't sleeping on the ladder side! But I'm weighting it down more now with the water jerry can. Just spent a couple even windier nights in the tent...amazing what that thing can stand up to.

    And earplugs are a lifesaver. Plus, they give me an excuse when @mrs.turbodb accuses me of not listening to her :D :lalala:

    Thanks guys, appreciate it. :thumbsup: Kaleidoscope was a special place for sure, and the next few days led to even more cool places!

    It was a very nice feeling to just head out cross country - we got a lot of that on this trip and the experiences there were consistently better than the one "well marked" hike we went on. Bummer you won't get to DV, but hopefully the other trips will be just as fun.

    Thanks! and glad you're enjoying.:cheers:
     
  11. Mar 5, 2019 at 10:47 AM
    #1751
    Blackdawg

    Blackdawg Dr. Frankenstein

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    Why? What are you afraid of? I sleep on that side all the time
     
  12. Mar 5, 2019 at 10:50 AM
    #1752
    turbodb

    turbodb [OP] AdventureTaco

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    Not afraid of anything - I know it's plenty strong over there. Just used to sleeping on the other side. I guess we also sort of like to have our heads away from where one or the other of us might be crawling in/out...but that's not that big a deal, we could just enter up the slider/tire/bedside. Habits man - when you get as old as I am, they're what you live by. :rofl:
     
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  13. Mar 5, 2019 at 11:07 AM
    #1753
    Blackdawg

    Blackdawg Dr. Frankenstein

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    lol i mean im a big habit person. But I always just lay head high. Makes leveling the tent out much less of a hassle too ha
     
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  14. Mar 5, 2019 at 11:36 AM
    #1754
    Reh5108

    Reh5108 Well-Known Member

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    You may need to change your handle to Rainmaker. I'm a little envious you always seem to find rain in places that rarely see it.

    Would a ratchet strap to a wheel be helpful in keeping the tent from folding?
     
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  15. Mar 5, 2019 at 12:49 PM
    #1755
    TenBeers

    TenBeers Well-Known Member

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    Thanks for bringing us along again, how's that truck riding?

    Hey, curious to hear more about your ExPed mat. While my mattress is still in OK shape, I'm looking for a little more padding. Do you fold it up in the tent, put it on top of the existing mattress, or just by itself? Have to do anything special to deflate? Looks to be pretty good dimensions for the 48" wide tents.
     
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  16. Mar 5, 2019 at 1:11 PM
    #1756
    turbodb

    turbodb [OP] AdventureTaco

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    Stop. Making. Sense. I've gotten along all these years without it, don't need you throwing a wrench into that situation. :p

    :luvya: :luvya: That's one each. :) And yes, a strap to the slider is something else I've done - really, I just want less wind! LOL.

    Truck's riding pretty nicely. There are always things to do, but hey, that's half the fun.

    So - the ExPed. It's expensive, but awesome. I've actually got several paragraphs on it in the rig review that's coming for this trip. It is a combo foam/air mattress that completely replaces the foam mattress that comes with the tent; it folds up in the tent (more easily than the foam) when you put the tent away.

    There are actually two versions of the Exped Megamat 10 Duo - one that's 41" wide (medium) and one that's 52" wide (long & wide). I got the 52" wide one since the CVT tent is 56" wide and the fit couldn't be better width wise (I'd say the mat is closer to 54" wide). It is a bit shorter than the original mattress (12" or so), but that's fine since the 8" on either end of the tent are unusable anyway due to the sides coming down at an angle. Alternatively, you could position the Exped so that there's no extra room up by your head, and then all 12" is at your feet, which you'd never notice when sleeping anyway.

    Check out the rig review when I post it and by all means ask questions. This thing is great.
     
    Last edited: Mar 5, 2019
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  17. Mar 5, 2019 at 2:03 PM
    #1757
    Digiratus

    Digiratus Adventurer

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    Did you do anything to keep the pad from moving around when you fold the tent?
     
  18. Mar 5, 2019 at 2:43 PM
    #1758
    turbodb

    turbodb [OP] AdventureTaco

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    Nope. Seems to stay in place and just fine. I do have the anti condensation mat, which probably helps to keep it in place. But it's with is the same as the width of the tent floor, so no matter what it would only slide lengthwise, and never really get out of place.

    For me though, it seems to just fold in half like the regular mattress, and there's no trouble at all.
     
  19. Mar 5, 2019 at 3:02 PM
    #1759
    Digiratus

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    Yeah, I was referring to length-wise movement during folding.

    My OEM mattress doesn't move at all either but it is almost the same length of the platform. Plus it is held in place by 4 velcro strips near the corners of the mattress cover to keep it from moving around during use and when folding it. I would think the notched shape around the hinges would also help keep it from moving. But the exped doesn't have the notches in it does it?

    I was just wondering how it behaves considering all the differences.

    Also, do you open a valve to allow the release of the air when you fold the tent up?
     
  20. Mar 5, 2019 at 3:19 PM
    #1760
    turbodb

    turbodb [OP] AdventureTaco

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    Yeah, I was a little concerned about length when I was paying for it and hadn't installed it yet, for the reasons you mention. But it's totally not an issue at all.

    There are two, one-way valves on it - one for filling and one for venting. So, when you open the tent, you open the fill valve (and then you close it when you climb in the tent for the night). The foam in the mattress helps to suck air in as it returns to its "inflated" memory. And when you put the tent away, you open the vent valve. Folding the tent in our "normal" manner vents the air out and it folds up even easier than the original mattress.

    ...so yeah, there's a really good summary of my rig review post. Guess you'll get to read it twice :). At least that one has some pictures.
     
    PcBuilder14 likes this.

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