โSep-11-2018 02:50 PM
โSep-17-2018 05:25 PM
โSep-17-2018 09:05 AM
โSep-17-2018 07:56 AM
pnichols wrote:ppine wrote:
You have a false sense of security about helicopters, Good Sam and AAA.
Maybe your relatives would drive 10 hours each way to help you.
Have you ever tried calling for a helicopter? I broke my femur about ten years ago in eastern OR in a mule wreck. I had several people out trying to find phone reception. There were no helicopters available. We drove 100 miles on dirt roads to a ranch air strip and a fixed wing Cessna with EMTs and first morphine after 8 hours.
Remote country is different and that is my point.
"money will buy anything." In Nevada it buys prostitutes, dope, alcohol 24 hours a day and gambling. Good luck getting a tow truck.
Sorry ... but you're mostly wrong.
My InReach Iridium system satellite device will fetch (medical) emergency help in most of the world if I push a button - including of course little ole' Nevada. That's what it's for - used by outdoor workers, explorers, and outdoor enthusiasts for emergency rescue and text communication.
My daughter bought it for us because we RV rockhound sometimes way out there and she got tired of not knowing exactly where we were at all times - and yes ... she'd take days off and drive personally to Nevada in her AWD SUV to find us once I texted her for help if there were no other way. My brother (ex AF Lt. Colonel) would do the same, and so would my son, and so would my BIL.
I'll bet if I had enough headroom on my credit card I could find a 4X4 Class 5/6 truck wrecker to tow my Class C out of, say, the canyons West of the Black Rock Desert ... or at the very least find a mechanic to drive his 4X4 out there, drop my gas tank, replace the electric fuel pump, and refill the tank with enough gas to get rolling again. I hope we never have to test this, though.
For what it's worth, on cable TV I've seen what huge 4X4 wreckers can do in Alaska in the winter to rescue semi trucks. All it takes is money (or credit) ... and communications not dependent on cell towers.
โSep-17-2018 07:51 AM
2gypsies wrote:
ppine: I wouldn't advise you to take a trip to Alaska.
โSep-16-2018 10:41 PM
โSep-16-2018 08:17 PM
ppine wrote:
You have a false sense of security about helicopters, Good Sam and AAA.
Maybe your relatives would drive 10 hours each way to help you.
Have you ever tried calling for a helicopter? I broke my femur about ten years ago in eastern OR in a mule wreck. I had several people out trying to find phone reception. There were no helicopters available. We drove 100 miles on dirt roads to a ranch air strip and a fixed wing Cessna with EMTs and first morphine after 8 hours.
Remote country is different and that is my point.
"money will buy anything." In Nevada it buys prostitutes, dope, alcohol 24 hours a day and gambling. Good luck getting a tow truck.
โSep-16-2018 07:13 PM
โSep-16-2018 03:30 PM
ppine wrote:
Even if you can communicate with someone, they are not going out there to help you.
โSep-16-2018 08:05 AM
pnichols wrote:ppine wrote:
For the group without spare tires, I would suggest going around Nevada except for I-80.
As an RV'er gets old enough such that they no longer consider theirself as immortal and/or invincible ... perhaps a help-access technology based on satellites instead of cell towers just might prove beneficial in Nevada, too. ๐
โSep-15-2018 07:15 PM
ppine wrote:
For the group without spare tires, I would suggest going around Nevada except for I-80.
โSep-15-2018 05:30 PM
โSep-15-2018 11:14 AM
โSep-14-2018 05:51 AM
โSep-13-2018 12:41 PM
โSep-13-2018 09:06 AM
ppine wrote:
For people that think US 50 is a lonely road, I would not recommend trying the secondary roads in Nevada.