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Re: Current vehicle of choice
Posted: Tue Jun 11, 2013 8:08 pm
by austex
For me coming in from out of town: whatever they have at the rental car counter that is cost effective, but I find a f/s car great for room, comfort and good mpg. Last week had a Malibu and got 25mpg LAX-Bishop...It's just too hard to borrow from family and friends for 5-7 days
Re: Current vehicle of choice
Posted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 2:17 pm
by Tom
My current mode of transport. It will not carry a lot of fishing gear but my legs and lungs are always in great shape.
Re: Current vehicle of choice
Posted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 9:42 pm
by mediauras
2000 Jeep Cherokee. Sucks gas, unnecessary for a lot of trailheads, but when you need the clearance and 4wd its awesome.
Nothing compared to a cheetah on a premium bike tho.
Re: Current vehicle of choice
Posted: Sat Jun 15, 2013 4:59 am
by xNateX
That Rubi is bad ass!
I've got an old old Toyota car. Celica, 91, 250k+. I had been torn about whether I ought to keep it or replace it. Finally decided to keep and recondition it just because it's less expensive and it does everything I need.
It's my sports car, jeep, and station wagon rolled into one. Blew out the rear shocks on some dirt roads coming back from a trailhead (at 200k miles). Threw out the rear seats to get extra space, alternate between snow tires and summer performance tires (whoo whee!), and still get 30 mpg. That's important; I'll cross the country at the drop of a season.
I love old Toyotas. Anytime I see them, I figure I'm looking at someone that has something better to do with their life than sinking time and money into their vehicle. But if money wasn't a pre-condition, I'd probably have a Rubi. Actually, if money wasn't an issue, I'd probably have an exotic. And a superyacht.
Re: Current vehicle of choice
Posted: Sat Jun 15, 2013 12:43 pm
by Shawn
longri wrote: But if you drive an SUV you may have seen me passing you uphill on the highway.
This is very true; I wave politely as people pass me by.
My daily driver is an '05 Xterra. The thing has been rock solid from day one and unusually fuel efficient for it's size (22mpg on the highway). More recently I decided to get a vehicle just for recreating on the weekends.
Re: Current vehicle of choice
Posted: Sun Jun 16, 2013 11:02 pm
by TRAUMAhead
Shawn wrote:longri wrote: But if you drive an SUV you may have seen me passing you uphill on the highway.
This is very true; I wave politely as people pass me by.
My daily driver is an '05 Xterra. The thing has been rock solid from day one and unusually fuel efficient for it's size (22mpg on the highway). More recently I decided to get a vehicle just for recreating on the weekends.
Nice Rubi.
Lift and tire size? How are the Duratracs? Heard they're great as an all arounder, just a little weak on the sidewalls.
Re: Current vehicle of choice
Posted: Mon Jun 17, 2013 7:46 pm
by Shawn
Thanks TRAUMAhead.
It's a Mopar three and a half inch lift and the Duratracs are 35's (you have a good eye). When I bought the thing earlier this year (it's a 2011 now with 10k miles) the tires were inflated to nearly 60PSI. Whew, now at 32PSI or so the ride is very nice on the Duratracs.
Re: Current vehicle of choice
Posted: Mon Jun 17, 2013 10:00 pm
by TRAUMAhead
Trail Grapplers are waaaay stiff in 35X12.50R17 (E rating + soft top + no doors = no weight on the tires). My first choice was Goodyear MTRs in 35X12.50R15 (C rating), but they were backordered with no ETA so I got impulse bought the TGs. Currently at 25PSI, still trying to get good tread wear.
Re: Current vehicle of choice
Posted: Wed Jun 19, 2013 6:38 pm
by cloudlesssky
My TH car is a 2001 Acura MDX. Over 185K miles and still comfortable, reasonable gas mileage, and can carry 4+ with gear. It's old and the paint is going so I don't mind leaving it for a week+.
Re: Current vehicle of choice
Posted: Mon Jul 22, 2013 6:27 am
by MountainMinstrel
My vehicle of choice is a 1969 VW camper.
IMG_3859.jpg
Great ground clearance, 20 MPG, and I can sleep in it. The body still needs work but mechanically it is better than new (1914 engine putting out 90 HP and 112 ft. lb. of torque) pulls the hills great.