If, like me, you鈥檙e a truck guy, then you鈥檝e probably found yourself thinking, 鈥淲hy don鈥檛 they make them like they used to?鈥 In our minds, the simple, old-school construction of older pickups, SUVs, and 4x4s seems to endow them with a certain element of unstoppability in comparison to the complicated electronics and refined civility of the stuff made today.
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But are older 4x4s actually better? Well, I think I just put that question to the ultimate test. Over the course of two weeks, I helped pilot eight trucks鈥攆our old, four new鈥攁cross Australia鈥檚 Simpson Desert.
The Vehicles
Down Under, one name is synonymous with 4×4 adventure: ARB. It聽builds the suspension, locking differentials, bumpers, lights, luggage, and accessories that make聽going way, way off-road for long periods of time not just possible聽but also comfortable. This year is ARB鈥檚 40th birthday: to celebrate, the company sourced four iconic trucks from Australia鈥檚 past and sympathetically restored and upgraded them specifically to complete this trip.
1976 Toyota FJ40 LandCruiser
During the construction of the 鈥攁 hydroelectric and irrigation initiative that remains the largest engineering project in Australia鈥檚 history鈥攁n adequate source of Land Rovers could not be found. Japan is closer than England, so an importation deal for the LandCruiser was struck, and thousands of the vehicles were brought in to support construction in the rugged environment. This glut of reliable, capable 4x4s fueled the beginning of recreational off-roading in Australia.聽The LandCruiser is the first vehicle ARB ever made parts for. The FJ40 allowed people to travel to parts of the continent previously accessible only by camel, and many of that original batch of FJs can still be found working on remote farms today.
1994 Toyota HiLux
There is no vehicle more indelibly associated with off-roading in most parts of the world than the HiLux. Toyota made millions of the capable and extremely reliable pickups, and they still form the basis of most rebel armies in conflict zones worldwide. This fifth-generation model is fitted with a 2.8-liter, four-cylinder diesel producing a very low 90 horsepower in stock form. One of ARB鈥檚 first mods to this truck was a turbocharger.
1989 Nissan Patrol
Never sold in America, the GQ-generation Nissan Patrol is legendarily strong. Its one-ton axles sit on highly articulating coil springs, and its 4.2-liter turbo diesel can easily be tuned up to 400 horsepower and beyond. This is a prototypical example of ideal truck specs and capability.
1995 Land Rover Defender 110
Gotta have a Land Rover. Produced for 67 years (in a few different versions), the Defender is responsible for both Land Rover鈥檚 legendary reputation for capability and its legendarily poor reputation for build quality. This vehicle was put together so badly that you could see daylight through the door seals, but it nevertheless proved an able, if agricultural, companion on the trip. This one was fitted with the lethargic, smoky, 2.5-liter turbo diesel.
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2016 Ford Ranger
Not sold in the United States, this Ranger is available in 180 foreign markets and represents the idea of a modern truck to most of the world. Rumor has it this platform will serve as the basis of the next-generation Ford Bronco and Ranger when they鈥檙e reintroduced to the American market. In contrast to the older vehicles, it has independent front suspension and an array of electronic driver aids, including many designed to help off-road. Its 3.2-liter turbo diesel puts out 197 horsepower and 346 pound-feet of torque while returning a combined 28 miles per gallon.
2016 Mazda BT-50
Mechanically identical to the Ranger, the BT-50 features more dramatic styling. This was our trailer hauler.
2016 Toyota HiLux
Similar to the Tacoma sold here in the States, the HiLux is available with torquier, more frugal diesel power plants.
2016 Toyota FJ79 LandCruiser
Toyota gives foreign markets this exceptionally strong, practical, and capable pickup that鈥檚 fitted with a 4.5-liter turbo diesel V8 and live axles front and rear. A true utility vehicle, it can be found working equally well on construction sites, farms, off-road trails, and even carrying troops as part of many foreign armies. If there鈥檚 one truck that every American 4×4 enthusiast wishes were sold in America, it鈥檚 this one. The 70-series FJ makes every full-size pickup sold here look positively frail.
The Drive
The largest sand-dune desert in the world, the Simpson Desert spans central Australia聽and was first crossed by a white man鈥攗sing camels鈥攊n 1936. From Alice Springs to Birdsville, our route carried us across 650 miles of it, including 1,133 sand dunes. Then we drove the famed Birdsville Track鈥攕ort of a dirt highway鈥攆or its entire 321-mile length聽before taking paved roads all 850 miles back to ARB鈥檚 headquarters in Melbourne. In total, faced with flooding, mud, and the incessant presence of flies, that took us two weeks.
Throughout the journey, we were self-sufficient. Obviously we had access to gas stations once we reached Birdsville, but the desert crossing was fueled by jerry cans, and we carried all our tools and spare parts, fixed the vehicles ourselves, and carried all our camping equipment, food, and beer.
This trip is one of the hardest challenges that can be completed by a 4×4 vehicle anywhere in the world聽and carried us to parts of the country the vast majority of Australian鈥檚 would never see. Doing it in older vehicles raised eyebrows on most people we met along the way聽or talked to about the trip afterward.
Challenges
Let鈥檚 break down the challenges we faced聽and determine which vehicles were most adept at meeting them.
Soft Sand
Driving up steep hills made from soft sand challenges a vehicle鈥檚 ability to find traction and its gearing to overcome sand clinging at the tires. The 1,133 sand dunes were not created equally, but the sheer number of them was an ever-present difficulty. The last dune of the trip was also the biggest. Standing 100 feet tall, Big Red attracts off-roaders from all over the country聽to tackle its steep slopes.
We had to cross Big Red聽late one night, on the last stretch of a long, exhausting day, with cold beers at the Birdsville pub waiting for us at the end. That day, nearly every vehicle had spent hours stuck in the mud, and the FJ40 was towed for more than 180 miles. We were tired, and all we wanted to do was get home, yet after fording windshield-height water at the dune鈥檚 base, I was unable to coax the powerful Patrol up the dune, even with both lockers engaged聽and in first gear, low range.
That first attempt was with the tires at 18 PSI; a second attempt at 12 didn鈥檛 go any better. Did I mention that my fuel gauge was reading below empty and our reserves were gone? I really wanted a beer, so a final attempt at 10 PSI got me up, but despite its torque advantage and very wide tires, the Patrol didn鈥檛 prove to be a terribly adept sand vehicle.聽Everyone else made it up on the first attempt.
Most Capable Vehicle: 2016 Ford Ranger. This was probably due more to its BF Goodrich All-Terrain K02 tires, which don鈥檛 break up the sand as much as mud terrains and allow聽the vehicle to float on top of it. But聽it still had the right gearing聽and plenty of torque聽to climb the dune uneventfully, time聽after time聽after time, when we returned the next day to play around.
Flooded Salt Pans
A thin layer of crunchy salt sits atop deep mud. During the dry season鈥攚hen so many people have succumbed to exposure that it鈥檚 now illegal to visit the Simpson Desert during it鈥攖hese form large, totally flat surfaces that can be driven across at extremely high speeds. These are similar, if smaller, to the Bonneville Salt Flats聽in Utah, where people race for land-speed records. But, man, when that mud underneath gets wet, these pans are a huge challenge. We faced bumper-deep mud with a slick bottom.聽With the mud pulling at the tires聽and no traction to be had, almost every vehicle got stuck, demanding we climb out, dig them free, and then use another truck to pull them out.
Most Capable Vehicles: Nissan Patrol GQ, Land Rover Defender, and Toyota FJ79. In the GQ, I was able to lock the differentials on both axles聽and just power through the deep mud, dramatically power-sliding the whole way. In contrast, the unfashionably narrow, lightly treaded all-terrains of the Defender cut through the mud聽and allowed it to slowly make its way across with only a locking rear differential. Heck, it even rescued the BT-50 once, complete with trailer. The FJ79, meanwhile, towed the FJ40 across a bunch of these flooded salt pans with nary an issue.
High Winds
With swags and other gear stacked high on the roofs of lifted trucks, the winds blowing across the Outback occasionally challenged the stability of our vehicles on the long, open tracks, while headwinds were sometimes strong enough to limit even our relatively modest speeds.
While trying to average 55 miles per hour in the 1994 HiLux into a headwind, we experienced engine overheating聽and were barely able to hold a constant speed. That was the only issue the HiLux experienced during the entire trip.
Most Capable Vehicles: Ford Ranger, Mazda BT-50, 2016 Toyota HiLux. The sleek, aerodynamic shapes of the most modern vehicles allowed them to cut through the wind without drama or loss of performance.
Muddy Tracks
Miles and miles of the Birdsville Track were muddy morass of deep tire tracks. We only just snuck through between closures. It was deep enough that the trailer would build its own berm of crud that would grind the Mazda to a halt every few miles, requiring that it be dug free, but everyone else was at least able to make聽forward, if slow, progress.
The slickness of the surface, complete with the tire grooves, created some unique issues. Driving the old HiLux鈥攖he lightest vehicle there鈥擨 had to lock both differentials聽to retain forward movement, but that led to wild power聽slides that聽would combine with the track鈥檚 deep ruts to spit me all across the road. Those are the conditions where you can roll a truck like this one. The Defender was again able to make steady progress, the FJ40鈥檚 torquey inline-six helped it keep going, and the GQ powered through, but聽the modern vehicles and their electronic safety systems actually proved to be best.
Most Capable Vehicle: 2016 Ford Ranger. It was able to find traction through slick conditions, and its stability control system kept it moving straight ahead, rather than sliding dangerously sideways.
Deep Water
We encountered water crossings that reached the bottom of the windshield. All vehicles were equipped with snorkels, but the constant water ingress, along with the debris it would leave behind, borked the alternators on the GQ and Defender, while the FJ40 developed a recurring electrical problem that we were never able to fully diagnose. We鈥檇 get it running again (mostly), but it would stop again the next time it got wet.
Most Capable Vehicles: Everything modern, in addition to the 1994 HiLux, which developed no electrical issues of any kind.
Steep Climbs
All of the vehicles were geared correctly, so climbing steep, loose shale in low range wasn鈥檛 a huge issue. While聽you would have expected the torque-monster GQ to prevail here, its clutch began to slip midway through the trip, requiring careful driving afterward. The manual transmissions on the other older trucks also required a bit of care when聽climbing steep hills, whereas the automatics were comfortable creeping along at extremely low speeds without any care or attention required from the driver whatsoever.
Most Capable Vehicles: The 2016s.
Big Rocks
Recreational off-roading in the United States is defined by rocky terrain, which requires huge tires and massive articulation to overcome, but聽traveling through the Australian Outback gives you the opportunity to avoid such obstacles and聽focus聽instead on covering long distances through sand, mud, and dirt. So none of the vehicles were modified with rock crawling in mind, but there were still a few rocks to be found,听and that鈥檚 where the superior articulation of solid axles was evident. The Nissan Patrol, in particular, with coil springs all聽around and very wide tires, made easy work of any articulation and grip issues we could find.
Most Capable Vehicle: Nissan Patrol. It鈥檚 simply the best platform for it here.
Curvy Roads
Not a traditional off-road obstacle聽but something you need to deal with in any road-legal vehicle, paved corners challenge any 4×4. Because our trucks were built for long-distance travel by experienced engineers working for a company that specializes in safety, none of them had a huge problem with even high-speed sweepers. Even the FJ40 was fun and safe to drive on winding mountain roads. But聽with independent front suspension, ABS brakes, more powerful motors, and electronic driver aids, the modern vehicles performed in a superior fashion. Chasing the BT-50 one night in the GQ, I was barely able to keep the Mazda in sight, and I have a background in high-performance driving.
Most Capable Vehicles: 2016 Toyota HiLux, Mazda BT-50, Ford Ranger.
Highways
When you lift a truck, put on big tires, and lower the gearing, you鈥檙e limiting its performance, worsening its ride, ruining its fuel economy, and potentially making it unsafe during high-speed maneuvers on grippy surfaces. Just putting in a full day on the highway, passing trucks,听and dealing with traffic are as challenging聽to these vehicles as anything they鈥檒l encounter off-road. And聽with their聽independent front suspension, six-speed transmissions, sound-deadening features, good stereos, aerodynamic shapes, and other modern conveniences, you cannot argue the superiority of a聽modern truck design in this environment. Even lifted and even on larger tires, they all managed to track in a straight line with the driver鈥檚 hand off the wheel. The older trucks all wandered around the highways like ships at sea.
Most Capable Vehicles: 2016 Toyota HiLux, Mazda BT-50, Ford Ranger.
Reliability
Let鈥檚 go through the problems the vehicles experienced聽one by one. The FJ40, well, it broke at least a hundred times. In addition to the electrics, it was the clunky mess you鈥檇 expect of a 40-year-old vehicle, even one fettled by mechanics before the trip. The 1994 HiLux鈥檚 only problem was when it overheated while being driven hard into a headwind. The Patrol鈥檚 alternator broke聽and necessitated replacement聽despite a few attempts at field repair. The Defender did better than anyone expected, only spewing grease constantly from its rear-wheel聽seals聽and suffering a temporary alternator malfunction when that was jammed full of mud. But聽you could see the sky through the door seals, the rear door wouldn鈥檛 stay closed, and nothing really worked inside, including the dash lights. Driving it was like driving a school bus that refuses to get stuck. The Ranger鈥檚 front sway bar fell off one day. The modern HiLux鈥檚 plastic wheel-well liners kept falling off. The FJ79 shed its right rear wheel and its studs while traveling at speed, luckily just a few yards before hitting pavement.
Most Capable Vehicle: Mazda BT-50. The trailer it was towing had its own problems, but that the Mazda crossed the desert while towing it聽without a single issue聽is extremely impressive.
Old or New Off-Road?
Only proving more capable than the modern vehicles in two categories鈥攐ne of which was a tie with the FJ79鈥攖he older vehicles are inarguably an inferior choice for an extremely challenging off-road trip like this one.
The relatively limited articulation of independent front suspension did not, at any point, prove a limiting factor. Had there聽been obstacles that聽the modern trucks equipped with it couldn鈥檛 have handled, those vehicles聽most likely could have simply driven around them.
The relative complexity聽and electronics-heavy approach of modern truck design may, in theory, be harder to repair in the field, but it also proves so much more reliable聽that it鈥檚 just not a huge concern.
Many people also complain about the size of modern vehicles, but here that again proved a boon:聽the modern trucks carried much more than their forebearers聽and did so with fewer issues.
I say this as the owner of an old聽solid-axle 4×4: you simply cannot argue the objective superiority of modern technology and conveniences. Modified appropriately, a modern truck is just as capable.
One of the takeaways from all this, at least for me, is that we should be pretty excited about the U.S. launch of the Bronco, and the Ranger it鈥檚 based on, in 2020. We鈥檒l be getting exceptionally capable vehicles that are still tough enough to handle grueling off-road challenges like this one. Not only that, but we鈥檒l also be getting exceptionally capable off-road vehicles that .
But the most fun 4×4 to drive? That was clearly the FJ40. It took the most work for the least speed, wore us聽out, and kicked our butts, but all that also endeared us to the truck in a way the more modern stuff just couldn鈥檛 manage. A lot of that rosy memory is probably due to shipping it home from the edge of the desert so none of us聽would have to suffer in it for two long days on the highway.