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Big West -> East trip

Posted: Sat May 11, 2013 12:53 pm
by akpv
Planning a bit of a drive leaving in 2 weeks time. Rough plan at this stage is

Perth - Karijini - Great Central Road - Uluru - Oodnadatta Track - Lake Eyre - Strezleki Track - Camerons Corner - Sydney (ish)

Depending on road conditions I may reduce the amount of dirt as I have a fairly tight schedule so can't afford too many low km days. I have got the permits already for the above.

http://goo.gl/maps/pLX2d

If any one who has done some of these sections and has some must sees let me know, any information appreciated.

Also be interested to hear peoples thoughts on any spares worth taking. I have a 2000 forester and plan on doing fluids and plugs before I go. Ill throw in some oil, cable ties and a 20L jerry. Ill also throw in a tyre plug kit and other basic tools. Any other suggestions would be great.

Posted: Sat May 11, 2013 6:20 pm
by yarney
Sounds like a great trip
I would take a spare cv shaft or at least spare boots and tools to suit
Have a good time take plenty of photos

Jan

Posted: Sat May 11, 2013 6:54 pm
by akpv
Not a bad suggestion. I actually have a couple of spare boots, bands and tools so I may as well chuck them in.

Posted: Sat May 11, 2013 7:10 pm
by TOONGA
and a snorkel and goggles going by the rain report for the top end :)

have fun looks like a great trip.

TOONGA

Posted: Sun May 12, 2013 10:27 am
by akpv
I play underwater hockey so I never go anywhere without my mask and snorkel.

Posted: Sun May 12, 2013 10:48 am
by TOONGA
akpv wrote:I play underwater hockey so I never go anywhere without my mask and snorkel.
a very breath taking sport :)

28 day forcast says low to mid chance of rain in the NT, they may as well do long range forcasting with a chocolate wheel :)

TOONGA

Posted: Sun May 12, 2013 1:41 pm
by 60766244
That's a hellova trip!

Haven't driven through the interior yet but it's on my list.

You'll love Karijini! One of my favourite places.

Subscribing with hope for many photos. ;)

Posted: Thu May 16, 2013 12:22 pm
by akpv
I have pulled a spark plug out of my forester a few times for inspection, always pull the front drivers side plug as it is easiest to access without removing anything. Last night pulled a few other leads, looks like my plug tubes seals need doing. A fair amount of oil in 3 of the 4. Glad I had a look last night, gives me time to arrange parts for the weekend. Was pleasantly surprised by genuine part prices. Total cost for 2 rocker cover gaskets, 4 plug tube seals and 10 bolt seals was about $120 (I assume this is without any trade price / discount). Although this is not amazingly cheap I thought it was pretty reasonable for genuine parts compared to what I have experienced in the past. Have subaru parts dropped their prices with the strong aussie dollar?

Posted: Thu May 16, 2013 4:08 pm
by Jeff
I did the oodnadatta , Strezleckie and Birdsville tracks plus Camerons Corner in June last year. I spent nearly 5 weeks out there and loved it so much i can't wait to get back out there. You will have a ball. Don't for get to take a fishing line as the Yellow Belly in Cooper Creek at Innaminka are good eating

Posted: Thu May 16, 2013 4:41 pm
by NachaLuva
That does sound very cheap :D

I'd take spare radiator & heater hoses, belts, coolant, hose clamps of various sizes, fencing wire or a few steel coat hangers, rope & toolkit. Also your recovery kit in case you need to get someone else to pull you out.

Most important of all...your camera & sense of humour if it gets really wet :rolleyes:

Posted: Sat May 18, 2013 12:39 am
by tony
I wouldn't bother with spare cvs or axles, if one goes you usually get thousands of ks before it actually breaks, as for boots just wrap thick canvas or plastic around them tpo protect them, if you are not going to go into real tiger country you are unlikely to damage them and even then they will still go for mles .
tools..go through the tool kit and chuck out any that don't actually fit your car, most tool kits contain several that don't fit and they just add unnecessary weight,a tip for water which i use is to save up the bags that go in wine casks, wash them out and use them for your drinking water. they are tough, are suitable for drinking water, and can be frozen solid in just about any shape to suit storage, they weigh nothing when empty and store away easily, so you don't have empty containers taking up space.
ask your local tavern they usually use a larger one for the house wine which holds a bit more.
if the taste of wine is not to your liking see the chemist he can advise what to use to clean it out.
one of those folding shovels is handy, and a simple test probe from big W or malz wll only cost $5 or so and can be worth its weight in gold for electrical problems.
if you go through a lot of spinifex make sure you stop and clean the underneath of the car every now and then it can bulk up and catch fire.
A jacking block of about 50mm x 200 x 200 wood (a chunk of 12mm aluminium is not that expensive, is lighter and takes less space) can literally save your life in soft sand, never never use one of those standard scissor jacks they will kill you they are so unstable. get a wind up with a long collapsible handle.

Posted: Sat May 18, 2013 12:41 am
by Matt
Second the snorkel, as the rains have started up here in NQLD, way way way late this year. When i was out there last year (Townsville to Alice Springs the scenic way) the roads are not to fun or very fun depends on your outlook when they are muddy.

Posted: Sat May 18, 2013 6:27 pm
by akpv
Thanks tony, some good suggestions there. Im well versed with the use of wine casks, I use them a lot for kayak and bushwalk trips, the house wine tip is a good one. I agree about the CV stuff, pretty unlikely to catastrophically fail out of the blue.

Have serviced the car now. New rocker cover gaskets, plugs, leads, oil, oil filter, braided brake lines (from ken) and fluid flushed and a new knock sensor (was throwing a code every now and then). I had a slight miss which is gone now, it must have been the oil in the spark plug tubes hampering ignition.

Also bought and fitted an awning, it is an OzTrail RV Awning. Camptrax are selling them on gumtree for $260 which seems a reasonable price.

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Posted: Sun May 19, 2013 2:46 pm
by vincentvega
you are going to love that awning when you need some shade in the middle of nowhere!

I would get rid of those wingnuts though. its just asking to be stolen! I try and use nyloc nuts wherever I can to avoid stuff coming loose on the corrugations.

Posted: Sun May 19, 2013 4:51 pm
by akpv
Ha, I was taking it off this morning and I thought exactly the same thing! Easy to steal. For some reason I didn't then think I should just put some nuts on instead.

Posted: Sun May 19, 2013 11:59 pm
by NachaLuva
Love the awning :cool:

+1 for the nyloc nuts....

Posted: Mon May 20, 2013 11:33 am
by 60766244
NachaLuva wrote:Love the awning :cool:

+1 for the nyloc nuts....
Seconding this whole post. ^^

I had people nick one of my kayak-holders from my forester roof racks! (Had four holders) Just wanting to cause problems for me. :\
You can only buy replacements in packs of two...

Travel with Google

Posted: Wed Jun 05, 2013 3:27 pm
by kievlar
Get around in an unknown city with directions for public and personalized transportation, in addition to biking and walking routes. See estimated time and even cost of travel all on one screen. You'll be able to plan your trip and get the most out of the journey with Google simple to use tools.

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Posted: Wed Jun 05, 2013 6:29 pm
by akpv
Great point chicken kievlar.

PS Made it safe and sound, got rained out near oodnadatta so had to take the bitumen from SA onwards.

Posted: Thu Jun 06, 2013 1:01 am
by akpv
Some photos of the trip here if anyone is interested:

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