I also saw one camper trailer variant which was actually a tool box sort of arrangement that sits on the back of a ute. I’ve seen these sorts of arrangements before, but on the back or built onto a ute tray. This one was built onto a ute with a tub, without any apparent modifications to the ute’s tub to take it.
This was made by M2O Toolbox & Canopy. I thought this was a great idea, this at least gets rid of the need for a camper trailer. If you’ve of course got a ute to add something like this to.
Weight would still be an issue for me. Though for M2O this appears to be their business; making toolboxes and canopies for utes so they would know how much weight is good okay and where the threshold lies.
I also had a look in the ARB tent and was rewarded with a showbag, which was one of those bags with the long handles that no one seemed know how to hold onto. Everyone seemingly bunching it up to carry it like a shopping bag. The way I carried it was swinging it round onto my back like a messenger bag.
I’ve only actually looked through the showbag now as I write this up. Within the bag is a copy of 4WD Touring Australia “Living the Dream” proclaims the under title, it’s “The Exploration Issue”. There’s the ARM 4X4 Accessories catalogue, notable for its shiny and slightly rough front cover with what is trying to be tactile sand on the front. 7 ARB stickers including; Safari Snorkel,ARB Sport, 2 kids ARB stickers, an ARB Dandenong Sticker, Old Emu 4X4 Suspension by ARB and Airlocker ARB. There’s also a pamphlet for ARB Dandenong and Issue 37 of ARB’s own magazine 4X4 Action, which is full of articles and adverts pretty much like any other magazine. Except this one’s produced by ARB.
Curious to know what ARB stands for? It’s on their website, it’s the initials of the company’s founder Anthony Ronald Brown.
Next I arrived in an area I was actually interested in; where all the four wheel drive clubs had decided to locate themselves.
I didn’t find a club I wanted specifically to join, but while talking with the Four Wheel Drive Victoria bloke he mentioned that vehicle specific clubs were taking members from non-related vehicles. So the Jeep club was accepting members who had vehicles that weren’t Jeeps.
That would be a kinda uncomfortable meeting to go to being the only person who didn’t have a Jeep. Jeep people are also a bit fanatical about their Jeeps. Wranglers especially.
I did grab a pamphlet about 4X4 Driving Training which looked interesting.
Only on closer inspection does it seem more interesting than just before I slipped it into my ARB showbag.
On one panel of the found out pamphlet it asked “Just purchased a four-wheel drive vehicle?” Then follows it up with “Are you aware of the responsibilities that come with owning a four-wheel drive vehicle”?”
Then it asks a bunch of questions like;
Do you know how to drive it?
How to make the best of you gears?
The different techniques needed to be able to drive competently in sand, mud, and other terrains while maintaining traction at all times?
How to drive it in the best interests of the environment and other bush users?
Are you thinking of putting some accessories on your vehicle? Driving lights, tyres, bull bar, winch, UHF radio, HF radio or suspension?
Will your choices be best for your vehicle?
Do you know where to go four-wheel driving?
It then says “If you answered NO to any of these questions then a Four-Wheel Drive Victoria Training Course is your best answer to getting into the four-wheel drive scene safely and responsibly.”
Now. Just think and look at the question it asks at the end in relation to the bullet pointed questions.
If you answer NO to the UHF radio question; NO I’m not thinking about putting accessories on my vehicle, then I should go for the training course. Uh...no, that’s not right.
The other questions do stand up against the final question, but the UHF accessories question doesn’t. Because you need to answer YES to that question in order for the final question to make sense, “YES I am thinking about putting accessories on my vehicle and I want help”.
If you answer NO to adding accessories then...well that’s it you don’t need to worry yourself about them.
Satellite phone have come down in price quite a ways.
I still wouldn’t call them cheap, but they’re certainly not stratospheric in price of what they once were. They were once things that sat in heavily protected Pelican cases that were chunky, robust and amazingly expensive pieces of technology.
They’re still that, sort of.
MGLSAT who were at the Leisurefest and even have a show room in Victoria, but mostly it seems operate from their website had two phones on offer. Provided by two different companies / satellite systems. Inmarsat and Iridium.
The latter many people will likely be familiar with. They’re the ones who were the first in portable civilian satellite phones. These phones have pole to pole coverage. Basically anywhere you can see sky these will work.
They’re also expensive, not gigantically expensive, but expensive compared to the alternative. The Iridium 9575 costs $1600. For what kinda looks like a 90s era Nokia. It’s dust and water resistant to IP65 works from -15 to + 65 ºC has a talk time of 4 hours (standby of 30 hours).
The other option is the inmarsat IsatPhone Pro. It costs $900.
Inmarsat doesn’t quite have the same coverage as Iridium does, but unless you’re a polar explorer it shouldn’t be a problem. The Inmarsat has global excluding the poles coverage. They achieve this by using 3 satellites compared to Iridium’s 66. Why these two companies and how they manage these two different amounts of satellites can be discovered from their Wikipedia pages.
Basically Inmarsat’s coverage misses out on most of Greenland, what appears to be most of Alaska and the aforementioned poles, although right up to the general area of the poles’ landmasses you might get coverage.
The relevant part of this is that Australia is in the middle of the I-4 Asia Pacific satellite coverage area, which means if you’re intending to use it whilst travelling around Australia it’s perfect.
The IsatPhone Pro does have a few different features than the Iridium 9575. The IsatPhone Pro is dust and water resistant at IP54, it’s got 8 hours talk time (100 hours standby), works from -20 to + 55 ºC and has Bluetooth. It looks like an early 2000s Nokia.
It’s got a bigger screen than the Iridium can manage faster data (up to 20kbps compared to Iridium’s up to 9.6 kbps) and it also cheaper.
There is the question of why anyone would get the Iridium? Well...it’s better for some things than Inmarsat’s offering. Mostly if you’re a miner or possibly a farmer or something like that. The Iridium is ‘always on’ and you can push an emergency button SOS button, you can also be contacted on it without extending the aerial. While the Inmarsat IsatPhone Pro you have to fold out the chunky aerial from the body and get a satellite lock before making a call.
I did actually go wanting to know about the price and features of these phones so did ask questions and found out this info. When I do eventually get a satellite phone (more because my family want me to have one) it’ll likely be the Inmarsat IsatPhone Pro. The price being the primary driver on that one, it’s cheaper than most smart phones and can do more when you need it than a smart phone.
Now of course there are other options for satellite phones, you can get cases that your smart phone clips into that, via an app gives the same options as the above two phones. These clip on cases contain all the satellite phone technology without the speaker, mic and other innards. They’re also not much cheaper than the IsatPhone Pro.
The other reason I was at the Melbourne Leisurefest was to investigate swags. I do mean in the plural and singular though not “swag” as in “swagger” which is how it’s been used of late.
Rather swag with the Australian definition a bedroll for camping, though it’s also evolved a bit from a bit of canvas that you crawl under to something with a few aluminium poles curved around to keep it off your face.
Why a swag?
Well I’m lazy, but also want to sleep outside in the bush and I find tents a little...meh.
If you look at a tent, even one of those round 3 second tents that’s not the end of the setting up, you have to fill your tent with something. Something to sleep on, and something to sleep in. Be it a foam pad or an inflatable sleeping mat and then a sleeping bag.
A swag has all of those things, it’s a thing to sleep within, it’s got a foam mattress and, well you can have a sleeping bag within it, or just a blanket.