AnswerID: 390242 Submitted: Friday, Nov 06, 2009 at 13:56
Member - Stephen L (Clare SA)
replied:
Seachanger
Many good replies above. With at bit of experience, you should get through if you follow a few very basis requirements, that surprisingly not every one follows. The ones that do not follow it are the Cowboys, Have 4x4 can go anywhere with no preparation or exception.
We have travelled the Simpson countless times, and it will get you in. We prefer the east/west crossings, a little more of a challenge, but still no dramas.
July/August are peak times our there, and the best time to drive it. Days should be perfect, mid to high 20's, even low 30's. Nights will depend on any cloud cover from well below 0 to teens when cloud cover. If you follow what I suggest, you should have a very enjoyable and safe trip.
At the base of either Big/
Little Red, depending which way you want to go over, drop your tyre pressure to 14psi.
You must have a good sand flag, at least 3m high from ground level.
Use channel 10 UHF, but also scan, and keep a listen out for any radio traffic that may be in the area that you will be.
Do not go like a Bull at a
Gate, gentle as she goes are the best results.
When at the top of the larger dune in the area that you are going over, put out a call on channel 10, asking if anyone is travelling the track that you are travelling.
Set up camp early, so you can go for a walk, get the fire going and take in the surroundings before it gets dark.
Having said what I have said, if you are experienced, you will know what I am talking about.
Drive to the conditions and your experience and will have a great trip.
Cheers
Stephen
 Click Image to Enlarge |
| At Home in the Desert |
Reply 5 of 7
FollowupID: 658095 Submitted:
Friday, Nov 06, 2009 at 21:35
Member - Stephen L (Clare SA) posted:
Hi Mick,
We will have to get you out into
the Simpson Desert proper one day. LOL. After our Geo crossing, over 400 kilometres of no tracks from
The Twins, out to the Colson, then on to Geosurvey Hill, then north-east to a confluence, then down to the Geographical Centre, the usual Simpson tracks are a walk in the park and like driving on a bitumen road. When we got back onto the QAA, nearly ever dune that we approached, some vehicle had been very badly bogged, and must have spent hours filling in the tracks with cane grass, while we just glided over with no problems. After a few dune we thought that it would have to stop, but no, all the way to
Big Red. We mentioned this in
Birdsville and was told than some European Tourists in a hired Troopy went through in 40 psi and got bogged on every dune, what a joke. Just imagine how much fuel they must have used.
Cheers
Stephen

This was the hard slug - we thought it would never end

Typical trackless country for over 400 kilometres
 Click Image to Enlarge |
| At Home in the Desert |
FollowUp 2 of 6
FollowupID: 659013 Submitted:
Saturday, Nov 14, 2009 at 07:34
Member - Stephen L (Clare SA) posted:
Hi Boobook
The Simpson is a great place, and if you have not been out there before, you will have a ball. Like all have mentioned, your biggest enemy is too high a tyre pressure. Most times, you will be travelling slow, second and third gear high range. There will be times when you can faster and use other gears, but for a first trip, just take it all in. Depending on which way you are crossing, you will find that wood is getting scarce in the western parts of the desert, but will always find enough for that nightly camp fire. The eastern sections of the desert, just before
Poeppel Corner, you get into the Gidgee Country with a lot more solid timber around. Our motto was when you see good timber collect it, as when you get to a
good camp site, thousands of other people have thought the same, and timber could be scarce. You do not need ton's of wood, and you will know after a few camps what you need, and us it sparingly. It would be impossible to bring enough timber with you, plus you would not have the room.
Cheers
Stephen
 Click Image to Enlarge |
| At Home in the Desert |
FollowUp 6 of 6