We did our annual New Year's day snow run yesterday. Long day due to some less prepared folks causing delays. I was flat exhausted when I got home. I didn't go nuts with pics but I was taking video clips throughout the day from my phone. Larry and Ian came along in Larry's Waggy. Our buddy Bill had his trusty Tacoma and Andy was on his maiden voyage with his L29 equipped Suburban.
There were a TON of other rigs. Like too many
There were some interesting rides. The 5.9Limited Grand Cherokee was packing a serious punch with a built magnum. His son was driving a modified diesel Liberty that was pretty cool. Too many were equipped with not enough tire and overcompensation with too much throttle. It would lend to some of the issues we ran into during the day.
First goal is to make it to our host's cabin. We took the long way in from the south, but at the lower elevation, the snow was minimal except for in the shady areas. Our hos was driving the 5.9 Limited Jeep. (click on the image to go to my flickr page to watch)
Snow run by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
You might notice by the sound I've got a wicked exhaust leak. I got to listen to it ALL day. Left side manifold blew out the gasket.
Snow run by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Snow run by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Snow run by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Snow run by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Snow run by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Standing on the deck of the cabin looking west.
Our host lit a fire in the fireplace to warm us up and he cooked up a mess of hamburgers and hot dogs, we all bought something to pitch in for lunch that hit the spot after the ride up.
We warmed up and eventually made are way further up the mountain to gain elevation and snow depth. We found it for sure. Larry's Waggy put on a little show with the lockers engaged and let the 6.4 Hemi sing.
Snow run by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Snow run by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Snow run by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Snow run by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
We eventually got high enough to reach a clearing from the trees. That area is deceptive. The wind blows through there drifting the snow deep in low spots. Larry is leading the way and manages to sink in and almost get stuck. He was able to back up enough to let me get by. The trail looked like a groomed ski run with corduroy grooves on the surface. Hmm, we must have stumbled onto a snowmobile trail here. By now I'm in low range and humming along in 2nd gear letting the 8.1 eat. Progress was going well getting a couple of hundred feet past Larry's spot when my momentum slowed and the truck broke through the crust and sunk in deep. No way to move forward or backward. Stuck good. Ironically, it's only a few hundered feet away from where I got stuck in May where I took the picture that was used for the calendar.
Just as stuck as before too.
Bill and Larry work their way down to rescue me. 3 tow straps couldn't reach. Larry had to use the Waggy's winch to pull me back enough to have Bill give me a tug from his direction where he is in shallower snow.
After a group of snowmobiles buzzed through (they didn't look happy to see us either) Bill was able to yank my heavy pig to spot where I could move again.
We've been here many times and much like a gatekeeper on a rock crawling trail, if we can get past this area we won't be able to proceed without a lot of digging and winching. We wisely started heading back down since it was getting late and the shadows getting longer. We didn't want to be up here in the dark.
That didn't stop a Bro-dozer diesel on 22" wheels with skinny mud terrains and 8" trashcan tip exhaust, stock '02 Silverado on street treads and an XJ Cherokee. They dive deep into the same mess I just got pulled from. Sure enough, they all got stuck just as quickly. Somebody in a different Grand Cherokee got them unstuck. We continued to move down the mountain. Making good progress we quickly came to another log jam on the trail.
This time it's a stuper dooty on street treads that managed to pop a bead on a log. He was following us up earlier and had be dealing with it while we were up higher. Turns out he didn't have the key to access his spare tire. So he couldn't swap a tire and move on. Once we got back to him they were mid-efforts to reseat the tire and failing. We lost an hour up there parked. We had to wait it out and watch the sun get lower and the temp drop accordingly. Normally the temp wouldn't be an issue with the heater in my truck, but it wasn't. I had every intention to replace the blower switch and resistor on new years eve, but seemed to have misplaced the two new parts I bought a week earlier. Trudging around in the snow my jeans were frozen, feet wet from the wrong choice in footwear and the temp was dropping fast.
Waiting around for the tire reseat was not helping. Running the truck I got a little residual heat that would come off the vent, but not enough to dethaw my feet. The tire was finally reseated and we were able to start making our way down the trail again. As predicted it was dark before we got off the mountain. Thank goodness I did install the LED bulbs in the headlights finally. Holy crap they throw the light down the road. We aired up our tires when we got back to pavement and made our way back to Westcliffe. Quick stop for fuel and we boogied back home.
It was a great first run for the truck. The drive to the trailhead took us 40 miles down the interstate where the truck hummed along in 5th gear without any issues. The big uphill climb just south of Colorado City where the 5.3/700r4 would be wound out in 2nd gear and losing speed the 8.1 didn't disappoint. Just roll on the throttle and it stayed at or above the speed limit in 5th. On the trail where I'd be in 4lo once the snow started getting deep or steep to keep the 5.3 in the torque band, I kept the t-case in high range and the 8.1 cruised in the snow in second or third gear without complaint. Only when it got really deep did I ever thrown the trans into granny gear or go for 4lo. Larry's spring adjustment really did its job without adding stiffness to the rear end. On-road it felt the same. Off-road it was just as good as before. We both wondered if it would make the rear bouncy or stiff. As un-scientific as we were picking leafs from other packs, it came out good. The steering gear Larry threw on made all the difference for road handling. No more wandering down the road.
Overall, as I thought it's a completely different animal to drive off-road and now on road too.