After leaving Colorado we didn't have as much time to take the kids to Bryce or Zion but we still wanted to at least take a different route home than we'd taken. I'm loath to follow the same route home on a road trip - drives me nuts. We decided to check out Bonneville and take the southern way back up to Oregon.
Bonneville was a mixed bag. It wasn't sunny which was a blessing since it wasn't boiling hot but the light was flat which isn't the ideal. It does allow for fun perspective games.
After that we kept the hammer down hoping to make it to Fields, OR by evening. We got in around 8 which sadly found the "town" all closed up. Supposedly there's a population of 82 in Fields but I'd say that is wildly optimistic. We parked next to a pair of fairly setup Nissan pickups but never saw the owners.
The next morning there were three very overland set up rigs that pulled in for fuel and I was left wondering what was the draw here?
We took off to see the Alvord desert since breakfast wasn't open until 8am and we were up early. Gravel roads and lots of wildlife.
And this was one of the highlights of the trip. The Alvord is a dry lakebed of immense proportions, namely 12 miles long and 7 across and I wasn't worried about coating my undercarriage with salt as I was at Bonneville. It would be fun to spend some more time there and explore it a bit more but it was a pretty remarkable place.
After that we visited some friends in Burns and headed home. It was pretty remarkable how much better the van worked as we came down in elevation descending Mt Hood. It was really a drastic change. While we were in Colorado I ended up taking the van off setting "4" (daily driver/economy) on the Hydra chip as it was really belching black smoke with almost any throttle. At home it never did this so I wasn't sure what was up. On setting "3" (heavy tow) it didn't spew smoke but the power was down to stock levels. When we got down to lower elevations there was a big improvement in power and switching to setting 4 didn't smoke any more. Hmmm...
I'm guessing it has to do with altitude but I'm not sure why the computer wouldn't adjust for the elevation or lack of oxygen. I'm guessing I'll have to do a bit or research into this but it makes me wonder if there's a sensor that isn't working.
I've made an appointment to have the gearing changed and ordered the OBD2 dongle so I can take a look at the RPM's so I get a bit more insight before I commit. Next up is to put a bumper on the front of this and reconnect with MG to finish up the wiring of the locker and front hubs.
Gregor