Great info on the hose there Adam
Made another practical addition to the Triton a couple of weekends ago in preparation for our trip on the weekend just past.
I mentioned a few posts back that we had recently picked up an Oztent RV4 and a tagalong tent. The RV4 is a long sucker when packed up and had no chance of fitting in the back of the tub with all our other gear. So a couple of Saturdays ago I enlisted the help of my old man and set about installing the Rhino track mounts on the roof to which the Pioneer platform would be attached.
Now I'm not sure how many people on here have fitted the track mounts themselves but far# me it did not go as smoothly as I had thought it would
Following the instructions to the letter it was all going great until we went to install the third rivet on the first side and the rivet didn't take, which meant the track just lifted back up. Drilled that rivet out and the preceding two and checked what was going on. There were too many sheet metal layers in that spot meaning the rivet was too short to take.
No problem, get some longer blind rivets and start again. Get to the second last rivet on the first side and the thing snaps in two meaning the rivet gun couldn't pull it all the way through
Die grind off the stub and drill out the rivets and contemplate starting again.
Now I'm sure a few people are thinking big deal, so you had to drill off a few rivet heads, get over it. But bear in mind each time that the mounting failed I had to clean up all the sealant on the track and roof channel and redo it again. Such a damn messy job
At this point I was over it and had lost faith in the rivets so I removed the roof lining and bolted the rails to the roof with caps head screws and nylock nuts. Grade 12 M6 screws, overkill probably but I don't ever want to have to worry about it.
I had cold galvanised all the drilled holes and used the appropriate sealant on each hole so that this thing doesn't leak. Removing the roof lining also allowed me to clean up some of the swarf that had dropped down (even though we had the vacuum going full bore on the drill bit some still dropped through).
The other hot tip is that the paper instructions have no warning about the presence of wiring under two of the holes, the online instructions do. Removing the roof lining and seeing where the wiring was on the drivers side and where the hole came through I am pretty sure that no matter how cautiously the drilling took place a sharp drill bit would have nicked those wires. Having the lining out meant I could just move them aside and safely drill.
Taking the latter approach we had the track mounts on and beautifully installed in no time and dropping the roof lining down was a very easy task as well.
Due to my anger that brewed early on in the installation I was too pissed off to take any photos until it was finished
Completed and at our relaxing campsite in the Geehi Valley one weekend later.....
I am very happy with the end result and it worked a treat carrying our gear.
Still got pretty good fuel economy with all that gear on the roof and the tub loaded up too, hit approx 620km before the fuel light came on.
Had a great weekend in the Geehi Valley and around the Tom Groggin area. Spent two nights in this picturesque valley...
That open grassy area in the valley is the Geehi Valley, you can just barely make the track out. This is being viewed from Scammel's lookout.
A view of the mountains from the lookout, not much snow left.....
Just coming on dusk at camp....
One of our neighbours.....
We set up just near Keebles hut....
Over the few days we were there we crossed the Murray into Victoria and had a drive around checking out the tracks and on the NSW side we drove the Geehi Walls trail and Major Clews Fire trail which allowed us to check out Major Clews hut along the way.
As seems to be the norm on these trips now we had to take a bit of a detour on the second day after a motorbike rider told us about a bloke in an 80 series that had blown a radiator hose and had no water to refill it or container to put some in. So I pulled up alongside the crystal clear waters of the Murray and filled up one of my water jerry cans.
About 15 minutes later we found the bloke and had a chat, he had the radiator hose blow off and lost all his coolant. Probably in not a very wise move he had driven another few km's with no coolant to try and reach a creek to get water. He said that him and his wife would be fine once the cruiser cooled down and was refilled, so I gave him my jerry can full of water so he could refill it in case he needed to top it up on the road and we parted ways. He wasn't there when we came back through later so he must have got going again.
In summary we had a great weekend away in an awesome location, with cracking weather and the mighty Triton loved every minute of it.