Death Valley
I'll try not to turn this into a full- blown trip report in the build thread. We had to keep the excursion a little more family oriented with the 4-1/2 year old and 21 month old girls on board. My Lippincott Mine Road/ Saline Valley plans were replaced with Scotty's Castle and the Furnace Creek visitor center. Instead of camping on the trail, we decided to use the common campgrounds. Our kids caught a cold on the first day of the trip and we opted to stay close to main roads in case we needed to abort the whole vacation. We still participated in a little off- pavement travel though.
When we traveled Titus Canyon Road in the Scout, I had to slow it down to 10 mph on the washboard road to stay in control with the worn- out shocks. It was embarrassing getting passed by a Ford Focus. This time, we were flying down that road in comfort. The suspension did well and the ride was nice with the new Cooper ST's aired down to 22 psi.
Stopped for lunch in Leadville.
After backing into this spot, we noticed a crapload of rusty nails on the ground. Luckily none punctured our new tires. We did our community service by picking up dozens of nails to hopefully prevent a future disaster. I would not recommend parking where we did.
Potty stop under the overhang.
Mesquite Campground
The Needle's Eye at Echo Canyon
Sunset
It started to rain hard on Tuesday morning, so we decided to take the long route home up 395.
We stayed in Mammoth and did a little snow wheeling on the way to Inyo Craters.
Perfect playground for the kids.
Mono Lake
The tires did great in all conditions. There was slight rubbing on the mudflaps and I'll have to perform a little trimming. Going from an E-load tire to a D-load was significant and the ride quality improved dramatically. The mileage was roughly the same as before: equally crappy. My best mileage was on 395 between Mammoth and Minden - 17.2 MPG's. The lower weight of the tires and reduced RPM's were negated by the power required to turn the larger shoes. The calculation was taken using the GPS unit, which showed 10% more miles travelled than the trip odometer.
The snow and rain erased all evidence of our Death Valley trip, which is sort of a "badge of honor" in my opinion. Oh well, less cleaning for me.