
Member III
We push our rides, even modify them to go beyond the intended limits of the manufacture. Eventually something will go wrong.
For the last 18 months I have been resurrecting an Isuzu Vehicross (amazing vehicle btw) that was probably scrap yard bound when I got, and it has been going well, mostly. I was on some very light trails, mostly sand and mud, but nothing too daring, and the Mass Air Flow Sensor took a dump. Made the engine run terribly, and I was able to limp it home. It drank a lot of fuel on the ride home. Almost half a tank in 30 miles, which is around 2(ish) miles to the gallon. I didn’t it was the MAF until I got home to my OBD2 reader. I got a new MAF sensor and it’s running normally again and it’s ready for more trials before I try getting anything resembling being truly remote. I now keep the OBD2 reader in the glove box.
A MAF sensor is not normally something that goes wrong, so there is no real “planning” for that to fail. Still, it got me to thinking about being prepared when being remote. There is a lot that most people don’t really think about, and there is also being over prepared.
I usually bring things like a tool kit, a spare belt, fluids, that kind of thing. For the most part I am confident in my ability to at least limp my vehicle home.
How prepared is “over-prepared”? Should I have wheel bearings? Seems like much, but they can fail. A welder?
All of these items also take up space and add weight. I realize there is a balance that must be maintained and each persons needs/wants are different.
What are some ways you have experienced or observed a breakdown while off-road that made you change what you include in your tool/spare parts kit?
For the last 18 months I have been resurrecting an Isuzu Vehicross (amazing vehicle btw) that was probably scrap yard bound when I got, and it has been going well, mostly. I was on some very light trails, mostly sand and mud, but nothing too daring, and the Mass Air Flow Sensor took a dump. Made the engine run terribly, and I was able to limp it home. It drank a lot of fuel on the ride home. Almost half a tank in 30 miles, which is around 2(ish) miles to the gallon. I didn’t it was the MAF until I got home to my OBD2 reader. I got a new MAF sensor and it’s running normally again and it’s ready for more trials before I try getting anything resembling being truly remote. I now keep the OBD2 reader in the glove box.
A MAF sensor is not normally something that goes wrong, so there is no real “planning” for that to fail. Still, it got me to thinking about being prepared when being remote. There is a lot that most people don’t really think about, and there is also being over prepared.
I usually bring things like a tool kit, a spare belt, fluids, that kind of thing. For the most part I am confident in my ability to at least limp my vehicle home.
How prepared is “over-prepared”? Should I have wheel bearings? Seems like much, but they can fail. A welder?
All of these items also take up space and add weight. I realize there is a balance that must be maintained and each persons needs/wants are different.
What are some ways you have experienced or observed a breakdown while off-road that made you change what you include in your tool/spare parts kit?