A few more from Copper Ridge


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Later that day/evening, Jessie and Riley invited us to ride Kane’s Creek with them since they were going to take their dogs to enjoy the water, so we tagged along, but didn’t get very far ...

This was the first difficult obstacle of the trail, and perhaps I was feeling over confident from the truck’s performance on Hell’s Revenge the day before, but instead of bypassing it like Jessie did, I decided to take it on and follow Riley in the Cheap Truck. He plowed right through it, but I took a slower approach, which proved to be fatal.
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The ravine was a steep decline followed by an immediate steep incline. Riley knocked it out of the park because he kept the throttle going. As you can see in the video, I stopped at the bottom before I began my climb, and subsequently got hung up on both ends, and all four tires were spinning.
A quick placement of a large rock to gain traction, just as Jessie was positioning to winch, and the truck drove right out.
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Wish it was that simple. Well it was, but while hanging there, the helicoils I had used in the transmission tail failed (yeah, I know, bad place to use helicoils) and the the transmission adapter started pulling out of the transmission, and tranny fluid was dumping everywhere.
This is where ORD started showing us that the quality in their parts begins with quality in their people. Jessie, Riley, and I got right to work and cranked on the adapter bolts to try to pull it back to the trans, but the helicoils were badly damaged and not much was happening. So Jessie donated his ratchet strap, wrapped it around the magnum 205, hooked the other end to the engine crossmember, and cranked it down as tight as he could, to keep the adapter from separating any further. We then pulled the front driveshaft to remove any pressure it may be putting on the tcase, and we turned around and high-tailed it out of there.
We crossed the ravine again, this time taking the bypass, and I led the way out of there so that if I had any further failure getting off the trail, they would be there to save the day
It was, to be honest, a really great experience. Seeing great people demonstrate their quality is something of a rarity these days, and it is forever appreciated. I felt bad, and still feel bad, for messing up their plans to take their dogs to the water, but I am sure thankful for their presence and quick work to get us back to camp.
The plan was to get to the trail head, and then Riley or Jessie was going to tow me back to camp, but the truck did fine getting off the trail, and we figured it best to just give it a go and beat it back, so the truck limped the whole way.
There’s a lot to appreciate about Moab, but there’s something about this picture that just captures so much, knowing that the truck is climbing up this grade, in two-wheel-drive, with a separating drivetrain, racing against the sun as it sets behind the mountains, my family in tow, brings back indescribable emotions.
Until next time folks. The rest of this saga, and the quality of the experience with Offroad Design just gets better from here.
Andy