After Action Review...
Event Album: https://flic.kr/s/aHsmVqm9Q8
Dung Beetle's performance: It ran well with no serious problems, but revealed some areas that need attention.
The traction control (VW ESP ) needs to be turned off before entering deep water, or trying 'donut' maneuvers. Running through the water, revving the engine for directional control and momentum; the last thing I needed was to have the ESP applying a selective hard brake and cutting throttle. Donuts are hard enough for me to do with the FWD and big front tires reducing the turning radius – having the car specifically try to stop spinning and sliding kills the fun and makes me sad.
The radiator hose issue: Occasionally the radiator fan rubs on the upper radiator hose. That's not good. I zip tied a piece of license plate metal around the hose to temporarily protect it, but the fan-rubbing-on-metal noise is not a good thing. Happens mostly when the car is put in park and rolls slightly forward. Maybe an engine mount is bad. Move the hose, or get a flatter fan.
Intermittent whining noise from right front: Seems to be caused by the angle and direction of the sun. I need to tint the passenger side window and fix the blend door for the HVAC. The door that switches from heat to AC in these VWs has big holes covered with foam. When the foam is gone, the heat blows along with the AC. Not good with Mrs AAZCD in the navigator seat in full sun.
Service the transmission: At the end of two days of hard driving, deep mud and water, and high revving fun, the transmission got a little clunky in low gear and shifting from reverse. At 112,000 miles I bet it has never been serviced. Couldn't hurt to change the filter and put some fresh fluid in.
Kit: HF “Racing Jack”, plastic bin with assorted tools, Duct tape and zip ties, Motor oil, water, and coolant, 15' long 2” wide ratchet strap, 50' rope, 12 volt jump/aux power battery. Add: Larger sockets to help out with Truck lugs, about three feet of radiator hose and heater hose, Hacksaw, and bigger hammer.
Navigation: We used Gaia GPS app on an android tablet and phone. Rather than entering all the checkpoints, we usually only loaded the next one. That reduced clutter and confusion of which point to go to. My offline map download was interrupted at some point and I didn't find out until too late. Expect no phone or data coverage and check maps before heading to the wilds. With Gaia, I liked using the “Guide Me” feature better than “Driving Directions”. “Guide Me” just shows a direct line to the checkpoint and lets you choose the path. “Driving directions” defaults to Google and tries to give turn by turn directions. In this terrain that's just an annoying voice nagging you to go the other way.
Social: People are awesome, but tend to stay in their little clusters at first. We stayed at a motel instead of camp, so we were even more isolated. Walking group to group taking pictures and asking about cars, breaks the ice and makes quick and easy friends. I need to take more pictures of people, most of my pics are of cars. Be prepared to explain the Gambler 500 and cars to everyone you meet on the road – You are a stranger doing strange things in their land. Most of them will share back with local knowledge and character.
Rodeos are awesome to watch.
Do not try riding an angry bull.