Back to Striped Butte Valley
#1
My two oldest grandkids were in town for a late Christmas and New Year.  They have both gone out separately with me on different multi-day trips and they wanted to go do something in the short amount of time we had.  When I need a quick two-day, one night adventure, my go to is usually Striped Butte Valley.  I packed up some gear and we headed out in the morning of January 2nd.  

I gassed up and filled two Rotopax in Paharump to avoid sky-high prices in Shoshone.  We made a quick stop to check out an old cabin before turning onto the dirt past the Ashford Mill ruins.  I aired down to give them a nicer ride and to be ready for Mengel the next day.  I was in a great mood because the high-speed death wobble the Jeep experienced on the way to the airport the week before was gone.  I ordered in new heavy-duty ball joints but before I installed them I discovered the driver's front tire, which until recently had been the spare, looked weird.  I think a cord or something was broken. Once I got it off the Jeep, no more wobble. 

But that joy faded once we started down the well-maintained road into Warm Springs.  The rear locker locked light started flashing and staying on randomly.  It's a super common JL Rubicon issue with the lock sensor.  My previous rear axle had the issue so bad we couldn't use the lockers at all until it was fixed.  And the fix was to install a $180 Z Automotive harness that tells the computer all is well.  That rear axle had a pinon bearing fail over the summer in Yellowstone so we drug the Jeep home using the RV with the pinon screaming the entire way.  Instead of messing with it I sourced a new replacement axle and did not reinstall the Z Automotive harness since I broke a wire during removal and the axle was new so the sensor should last more than 12K.  But it didn't.

Anyway, the road into Warm Springs is a super highway, no issues at all.  It's a little bumpier past that, you might not want to bring your 1997 minivan, but we didn't need 4wd all the way into Geologist cabin.  We hoped my good luck streak of getting the old stone cabin would hold, but it didn't  Someone was already camped outside in their super fancy off-road trailer and planning on spending a few days.  We chatted while the kids got a look at the cabin.  From there we went over to Russell's.  I grabbed a broom and a dust mask, opened a window and swept out the Honeymoon Suite, the best looking room there.  We wiped down the table and chairs and set up our cots.  Once we got moved in we went up to the chairs at the overlook and hiked over to Stella's.  It looked cleaner than in early December when I passed through last.

We spent the night watching various rigs pass through towards the pass, having a fire and playing cards.  In the morning after watching sunrise we packed everything up, folded the flag and made our way towards Mengel Pass.  This was at least my fourth time across in the past 12 months and the third in this Jeep.  I wasn't expecting any surprises and there were none.  There's some bumps, ruts, rocks, etc, but nothing I would consider hard core off-roading.  Anything with good ground clearance, proper off-road capable tires and 4lo if needed will have zero issues.  Go slow, pick a good line and use a decent map to stay on route.  We stopped to pay our respects to Mengel on top of the pass and then made our way to Goler.  Then we turned towards Barker Ranch where we found a camper packing up.  We showed him the route to the old dump site and then took some pics.  I never got to see the place before it burned down. 

I showed the kids the old Jeeps supposedly stolen by Charlie and Company at the dump and then we continued down.  We stopped by the old Keystone mine and Newman's cabin.  At Newman's I smelled coolant coming from the Jeep.  Popping the hood I found a crack in a coolant reservoir, but didn't know what it was for.  On this Jeep I have a reservoir for the turbo, the massive eTorque battery and the engine.  While the kids had a snack I fired up Starlink and searched the WWW.  Turns out it was for the engine and it's also a super common JL Jeep issue.  So common parts are on national back order forever.  The best aftermarket part also has a long lead time.  Knowing we needed the Jeep as our RV toad for a trip starting on the 8th, I ordered the Mopar part that I'll never see and the China Amazon version.  After stowing Elon's hardware we cruised over miles of washboard road to Ballarat.  The kids explored everything there and instead of heading towards the Big 4 mine as planned, we went to Stovepipe Wells for burgers.  From there we made our way home without further problems. 

Once home I tried the Z Automotive locker harness from the old axle, but even repairing the wire didn't fix it.  I must have damaged the computer chip as well since installing it made my sensor problem worse.  I ordered a new one.  All my parts arrived yesterday.  I put the new harness in taking about 90 seconds.  I knocked out a quick oil change and then started on replacing the coolant reservoir.  On a JK or something earlier that would be a three minute job.  On a JL it's a PITA.  At one point I dropped a small screwdriver into the engine bay and could not find it.  My wife and I searched for over an hour from the top and bottom but it had vanished.  Using a floor jack I lifted the right front up as high as the jack would go so the left side was fully flexed.  Even with this configuration that screwdriver was MIA.  Frustrated I went to release the jack and my dirty hands caused the jack to drop the Jeep violently.  But, the screwdriver fell to the floor.  The rest of the install was painless.  To recap - route into Striped Butte Valley via Warm Springs is a super highway, Mengel is as it usually is, but no issue with a proper 4 x 4.  Goler has one bump below Newman's that isn't an issue downhill and shouldn't be an issue uphill.
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#2
Are we sure this is a trip report? I kind of dug in and stuck around more for the day in the life of a Jeep owner report, ha! Smile

Appreciate the info on the status of the route to Striped Butte right now as I'm hoping to be there sooner than later. Thanks for giving some TLC to Russell's Cabin as well – wish more people acted like you in the backcountry. I'd love to exit by Mengel / Goler, which both sound to be in fabulous shape, but don't want to risk it with an oversized Dodge Ram w/ camper shell and no lift in our group due mostly to length & width of their rig. Oh well!

Good luck with the Jeep and easy travels with the trip you're headed out for tomorrow. Hope it's a great time.
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#3
Next time I lose a tool in the engine I'll have to try that drop the jack trick, clever Smile
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#4
(Yesterday, 07:35 PM)MojaveGeek Wrote: Next time I lose a tool in the engine I'll have to try that drop the jack trick, clever Smile

I was stressed because we leave Wednesday morning for a week long trip and if I didn't get the screwdriver out I knew it would work its way through the turbo, into the valve train and out the transfer case.  That's just the kinda luck I have.
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#5
Can we derail this thread to a what's-gotten-lost-in-the-engine-bay thread?

Sorry-not-sorry these are all Toyota stories... Big Grin

- My dad lost a flashlight in the engine bay of our 4Runner when I was little. Couldn't find it. It rolled out when we stopped at the mailbox (rural road so a ways from home) over a month later. 

- I inherited my grandpa's 4Runner (yes another 4Runner). A friend was helping me look it over, and we found a 10mm socket wedged deep in and behind the wheel well. Looked like it'd been in there for quite a long time. 

- Lost one of the top shock nuts when replacing the blown rear shocks on my mom's FJ two Decembers ago in 40 degree weather. Of course it rolled down the frame and I lost sight of it, rather than just hitting the ground, but guessing it's probably wedged in by the fuel tank and would have to drop the tank to get it. 

I thoroughly enjoyed hearing about your Jeep tales. Bummer about parts being so hard to get. Really sorry to hear that. Hope it doesn't prevent any of your planned trips from happening!
Link to my DV trip reports, and map of named places in DV (official and unofficial): http://kaurijacobphotography.yolasite.com
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#6
(Yesterday, 08:23 PM)Kauri Wrote: Can we derail this thread to a what's-gotten-lost-in-the-engine-bay thread?

Sorry-not-sorry these are all Toyota stories... Big Grin

- My dad lost a flashlight in the engine bay of our 4Runner when I was little. Couldn't find it. It rolled out when we stopped at the mailbox (rural road so a ways from home) over a month later. 

- I inherited my grandpa's 4Runner (yes another 4Runner). A friend was helping me look it over, and we found a 10mm socket wedged deep in and behind the wheel well. Looked like it'd been in there for quite a long time. 

- Lost one of the top shock nuts when replacing the blown rear shocks on my mom's FJ two Decembers ago in 40 degree weather. Of course it rolled down the frame and I lost sight of it, rather than just hitting the ground, but guessing it's probably wedged in by the fuel tank and would have to drop the tank to get it. 

I thoroughly enjoyed hearing about your Jeep tales. Bummer about parts being so hard to get. Really sorry to hear that. Hope it doesn't prevent any of your planned trips from happening!

I'm checking with some experts, but that might be one of the only known cases of someone finding a 10 mm socket. 

Jeep is fine and mission ready.  I just ordered 5 new KO3s to put on once we get back.  And if the Jeep wasn't mission ready, we would take the other Jeep. Smile
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#7
(Yesterday, 08:40 PM)VintageDUG Wrote: I'm checking with some experts, but that might be one of the only known cases of someone finding a 10 mm socket. 

That is good to know. Maybe I'll see if I can enter it in the Guinness Book of World Records Big Grin
Link to my DV trip reports, and map of named places in DV (official and unofficial): http://kaurijacobphotography.yolasite.com
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#8
Curious to hear how those KO3s treat you ... I just switched back to Cooper Discoverers after giving BFG another shot with their KM3s. Also have some questions about your experiences with Starlink, but that's another rabbit hole for some other day.
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