Nomad9
8th April 2010, 09:07 AM
Hi Forumites,
Took a trip up to Denham over the Easter break, towed the TVan for a bit of relaxing R&R looking at Dolphins and stuff like that.
On the way up to Denham we stopped for the occasional break and as you do you check things, make sure everything is right. Well, at the first stop which was Gingers cafe for a spot of meat free breakfast as I exitied the trusty steed I could smell warmish rubber, checked the tyre temps and the rear ones were considerably warmer than the front tyres and also the camper trailer tyres (as you would expect), checked tyre pressures around the 40 psi mark, I've got Cooper HT plus 255 60 18's on.
I've now also got, a dual wheel carrier both wheels fitted, 18's, I have a long range tank 104 litres I also have a 40 litre Engle, which as you would expect was full at the time. I have a home made shelf on which I mount the Engle and fridge slide, I have a high lift jack mounted on the dual wheel carrier, (looks good but I could well take this off I don't know I can justify carrying this around with me all the time I've only ever used this twice in about ten years, if I do take it off that'll be the time I need it). I have two plastic drawers under the shelf, one has a multitude of parts and tools in it should something unfortunate happen, I have an air compressor also a snatch strap, shackles and first aid kit plus a small amount of snack type food in the second drawer.
At the second stop, Geraldton I think, I checked the max tyre pressure for the tyre on the side wall, noted it was 50 psi so I bumped the pressure up to around 46 psi, the tyre temp dropped considerably, still warmer than the front tyres so I left the pressure there.
Next issue, during my time around the Denham area I did some beach driving, my favorite topic..... Going along fine came acoss some soft stuff, straight down, well more or less. So I dropped the rear tyre pressures to around 11 psi, low I know but I was on my own and I wanted to make sure I got out OK. Didn't drop the front tyres at all, drove out no problem at all, did what I had to do and drove out onto the road again, apart from being stopped by one helpful gent who wanted to tell me my rear tyres appeared to be flat, he wasn't far wrong, but they were still at 12 psi. After I had finished I pumped my tyres back up to around 40 psi I proceeded back to the camp site all good.
No I don't think I'm that bad a driver, I've never had issues like this before when driving either my old GU Patrol 265 profile tyres or my classic Rangie which had 245 profile tyres on it, the Patrol had similar equipment installed, the Rangie had very little but had a cable accelerator and three and a half litres of pure grunt!!!!
When my D3 went down in the soft stuff, I couldn't get the auto to get that shock reverse bump you need every now and again to make a move, the engine and gearbox went into a stall where the engine revs would go to a certain place and the vehicle wouldn't move, no wheel spin either, put the vehicle into forward and off we went in a "puff of smoke". This is the second time this stall "thing" has happened is this normal?
The vehicle is faultless, no alarms, no messages nothing and runs like a dream. At the moment I'm just putting this down to weight, I can't find anything else, the tyres are a 255 profile, sure they're not BFG's but the performance shouldn't be that bad should it? I understand momentum theory, no problem there, but driving around on a beach with kids on it and other holiday makers acting like a right "pot herb" using the "I have to have momentum" excuse doesn't really cut it.
By the way, the way I wired my electronic brake controller where I wired the controller directly into the multi pin socket behind the left hand rear bumper worked a treat, even when the auto lights cut in nothing unexpected happened which I'm thankful about, I didn't do any bridging wires around the fues holders in the LH rear inside panel, just info for others.
Sorry the thread is so long I just wanted to get all the info in the thread so people can make informed constructive comments. :confused:
Took a trip up to Denham over the Easter break, towed the TVan for a bit of relaxing R&R looking at Dolphins and stuff like that.
On the way up to Denham we stopped for the occasional break and as you do you check things, make sure everything is right. Well, at the first stop which was Gingers cafe for a spot of meat free breakfast as I exitied the trusty steed I could smell warmish rubber, checked the tyre temps and the rear ones were considerably warmer than the front tyres and also the camper trailer tyres (as you would expect), checked tyre pressures around the 40 psi mark, I've got Cooper HT plus 255 60 18's on.
I've now also got, a dual wheel carrier both wheels fitted, 18's, I have a long range tank 104 litres I also have a 40 litre Engle, which as you would expect was full at the time. I have a home made shelf on which I mount the Engle and fridge slide, I have a high lift jack mounted on the dual wheel carrier, (looks good but I could well take this off I don't know I can justify carrying this around with me all the time I've only ever used this twice in about ten years, if I do take it off that'll be the time I need it). I have two plastic drawers under the shelf, one has a multitude of parts and tools in it should something unfortunate happen, I have an air compressor also a snatch strap, shackles and first aid kit plus a small amount of snack type food in the second drawer.
At the second stop, Geraldton I think, I checked the max tyre pressure for the tyre on the side wall, noted it was 50 psi so I bumped the pressure up to around 46 psi, the tyre temp dropped considerably, still warmer than the front tyres so I left the pressure there.
Next issue, during my time around the Denham area I did some beach driving, my favorite topic..... Going along fine came acoss some soft stuff, straight down, well more or less. So I dropped the rear tyre pressures to around 11 psi, low I know but I was on my own and I wanted to make sure I got out OK. Didn't drop the front tyres at all, drove out no problem at all, did what I had to do and drove out onto the road again, apart from being stopped by one helpful gent who wanted to tell me my rear tyres appeared to be flat, he wasn't far wrong, but they were still at 12 psi. After I had finished I pumped my tyres back up to around 40 psi I proceeded back to the camp site all good.
No I don't think I'm that bad a driver, I've never had issues like this before when driving either my old GU Patrol 265 profile tyres or my classic Rangie which had 245 profile tyres on it, the Patrol had similar equipment installed, the Rangie had very little but had a cable accelerator and three and a half litres of pure grunt!!!!
When my D3 went down in the soft stuff, I couldn't get the auto to get that shock reverse bump you need every now and again to make a move, the engine and gearbox went into a stall where the engine revs would go to a certain place and the vehicle wouldn't move, no wheel spin either, put the vehicle into forward and off we went in a "puff of smoke". This is the second time this stall "thing" has happened is this normal?
The vehicle is faultless, no alarms, no messages nothing and runs like a dream. At the moment I'm just putting this down to weight, I can't find anything else, the tyres are a 255 profile, sure they're not BFG's but the performance shouldn't be that bad should it? I understand momentum theory, no problem there, but driving around on a beach with kids on it and other holiday makers acting like a right "pot herb" using the "I have to have momentum" excuse doesn't really cut it.
By the way, the way I wired my electronic brake controller where I wired the controller directly into the multi pin socket behind the left hand rear bumper worked a treat, even when the auto lights cut in nothing unexpected happened which I'm thankful about, I didn't do any bridging wires around the fues holders in the LH rear inside panel, just info for others.
Sorry the thread is so long I just wanted to get all the info in the thread so people can make informed constructive comments. :confused: