鈥淒id y'all use a chopper to get those in here for a photoshoot?鈥澛爐he driver of a highly modified Jeep asked me.聽I was sitting on the tailgate of a brand new Range Rover, sipping a cup of tea, perched atop Moab鈥檚 famous Hell鈥檚 Revenge 4×4 trail. For the record, the answer is no, we didn鈥檛.
To drive Hell鈥檚 Revenge, vehicles have to overcome steep climbs up slick-rock, then brave gnarly descents down the other side. They have to straddle splits in the rock and聽cross steep side slopes along precipitous drops. Late last year, I managed to do all that in a stock Range Rover鈥攚ithout sustaining an inch of damage.聽

How You Can Do It
I was in Moab as part of one of. If you鈥檝e ever drooled over the ambitious trips under the #overland hashtag on Instagram, now is your chance to safely venture off-road in someone else鈥檚 really expensive 4×4. They're conducted in different destinations around the world, and run from $275 for an hour's drive to $1,200 per聽day for the bigger expeditions.聽
They鈥檙e a great opportunity for Land Rover owners to learn what their vehicles are capable of. Despite their price tags, their powerful engines, and their on-road comfort, the brand鈥檚 SUVs are still capable of tackling extreme off-road terrain, with stock parts. And the company employs the best driving instructors in the world to teach its customers how to do that. You don鈥檛 need to be a Land Rover owner to join, but after seeing what these trucks can do, it might be hard for you not to buy one after.
As as experienced off-road driver (I used to be the editor of Australia鈥檚 Unsealed 4×4 magazine), I was worried that the tour would stick to Moab鈥檚 easier trails. But I walked away impressed by the degree to which聽they let us push the vehicles鈥 limits. The stiff suspension of a Range Rover Sport made it easier to control on Seven Mile Rim, though聽the 22-inch wheels and low-profile tires required some strategic planning to prevent flats. The Discovery鈥檚 impressive approach and departure angles came in handy on Poison Spider, where the three-row SUV handled the Wedge and Waterfall with ease. But that vehicle lacked the absolute luxury of the supercharged Range Rover that I took on Hell鈥檚 Revenge.

The Range on Slick Rock
Underneath the Range Rover鈥檚 glitzy exterior lies legitimate off-road components and construction. There鈥檚 a proper low-range gearbox, true four-wheel drive, a locking rear-differential, and height adjustable four-wheel independent air suspension. The vehicle鈥檚 computers modulate all those components, as well as the stability control system, optimizing performance聽and enabling smooth progress over big obstacles.聽
But this isn鈥檛 the easiest vehicle to drive on technical terrain. The long wheelbase that helps maximize interior space also creates a limited breakover angle, which means there's a limit to how high the stuff you drive over can be. Luckily there are聽factory skid plates to absorb any underbody hits鈥擨 was grateful for them several times. The aerodynamic bumper that helps facilitate the truck鈥檚 155 mile-per-hour top speed requires care when approaching steep obstacles. It just barely missed rock in a couple places.
Splitting 510 horsepower and 461 pound-feet of torque between all-four wheels, with a crawl ratio of 45.5:1 and a stability control system that independently tweaks all four brakes, the Range Rover doesn鈥檛 lack for聽motive force鈥攐r the traction to employ it. Even the steepest climbs are no problem. Land Rover invented Hill Descent Control, and now with 20 years of development behind it, the electronic system still takes the hard work out of hair-raising descents.聽
At the end of the the slick rock on Hell鈥檚 Revenge, you鈥檙e thrown into a series of rubble-strewn descents as you drop of the mesa. This is where the Range Rover truly excelled. Where the majority of the trail is solid rock and predicable (albeit with extreme angles), these lesser obstacles can be trickier, with unstable rocks tossed around under the vehicle鈥檚 wheels. This is where the Range Rover鈥檚 terrain response system beats out the manual controls of a traditional 4×4. Rather than fumbling with turning lockers on and off, in the Range, you simply have traction. Always.聽

Should You Try This?
Should you take your $120,000 SUV to Hell鈥檚 Revenge? While the Range Rover is still phenomenally capable, it鈥檚 wrapped in an expensive-to-repair, damage-prone body. At a minimum, you should be an experienced off-road driver with a great spotter, and have most of a day to kill if you want to give it a try.
That鈥檚 the beauty of doing it with the Land Rover Experience. Not only are you driving someone else鈥檚 truck, but their expert instruction will be capable of getting a driver of any skill level to do the stuff you see in these photos. It鈥檇 be a phenomenal way to get someone interested in off-roading, and give them the confidence to set out on their own the next time.