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4WD & Offroad Driver Training - VIC

General Tech Talk

Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators

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Posts: 4330
Joined: Tue Jun 08, 2004 6:06 pm
Location: Central Victoria

4WD & Offroad Driver Training - VIC

Post by coxy321 »

Hi all. Just wondering who/where the best place is to go for four wheel drive driver training in Victoria. My birthday is coming up and i figured that rather than blowing money on accessories, i'd go and get some edumacationing.

I grew up on a farm, and have been driving since i can remember, but i would like to go out and see what/how i should REALLY be driving, not just going off what my good old mates tell me i should be doing. I'm sure the old fellas could show me a thing or two.

ALSO, i'm going to take my better half with me to to some driving, as she is currently too shit-scared to even drive my car out of the drive (because its so fast and all :lol: ). I think the scientific name is bigtrukus-amaphobiosus-maximus.

Any names, businesses or experiences are more than welcome.

Cheers and thanks in advance,

Coxy
Posts: 2097
Joined: Mon Jun 14, 2004 8:06 pm
Location: Land of Plenty

Post by blkmav »

Weekdays - Prado GXL D4D with some stuff
Weekends - Mav shorty with lots of stuff
Posts: 1931
Joined: Sun Jun 22, 2003 10:29 am
Location: Everything 4WD, 86 Camms Rd Cranbourne

Post by GUJohnno »

They run an excellent program.
Also join a club. The knowledge you can gain by wheelin with experienced people that have learnt through training and experience of many years is invaluble
My club
www.vfwdc.com
My store
Everything 4WD
86 Camms Road Cranbourne
www.everything4wd.com.au
sales@everything4wd.com.au
Phone: 03 59955055
Posts: 4330
Joined: Tue Jun 08, 2004 6:06 pm
Location: Central Victoria

Post by coxy321 »

Yeah, I've been looking at joining a club for a while, there's three fairly close to Seymour, but its just a matter of which one i wont get bored with. I think the Alexander or Mansfield ones are looking good. I'm even considering the Geelong 4WD Club.
Posts: 1606
Joined: Sat Oct 26, 2002 7:20 pm
Location: Geelong

Post by HSV Rangie »

coxy321 wrote:Yeah, I've been looking at joining a club for a while, there's three fairly close to Seymour, but its just a matter of which one i wont get bored with. I think the Alexander or Mansfield ones are looking good. I'm even considering the Geelong 4WD Club.
Goulbourn Valley 4x4 club Shepparton.

Good club. was member/President many years ago.

Michael.
Mitsubishi 2010 NT DID Pajero wagon, Factory rear diff lock, Dual batteries, ARB bar, winch, Mt ATZ 4 rib tyres.
1986 RR.
Custom suspension links etc.
HSV 215 engine.
4.3 diffs.
Posts: 8556
Joined: Mon Jun 13, 2005 9:34 pm
Location: Sydney

Post by RockyF75 »

I will probley get flamed for this but I reckon save your money for lockers :D . Just dont be stupid when driving, go out with experienced 4x4's and gradually build up your knowledge base. Also alot of helpfull tips to be found on this forum and other 4x4 sites. This is how i've learn't and wouldn't have it any other way, I've done 'training' courses for other recreational activities and found it just takes the fun out, and teaches you basic common sense which you should have anyway :roll:

But i've never done a 4x4 course so my opinions of them could be totally wrong ;)

And I also spent a fair amount of time 'spotting' for others before I actually got my 4b :D

And IMO the 'correct way' isn't always the BEST way :armsup:
60 + Turbo, 33"s :armsup:
Posts: 1931
Joined: Sun Jun 22, 2003 10:29 am
Location: Everything 4WD, 86 Camms Rd Cranbourne

Post by GUJohnno »

Yep, better put your suit on!! ;)

Personally i think it is vital that every one gets training of some form when they start. Just weelin with a bunch of guys doesn't mean your going to learn much from them.
Learning correct stall recovery is a definate must, especially if you have a manual vehicle. Not knowing the correct techniques is asking for trouble. i have seen what can happen when some one gets it wrong and it's bloody scary!!

You would be better NOT getting lockers and learning as much as you can and get used to your vehicle, it's size and knowing that you can place your wheels where you want them. Lockers can get you further into the sh** and without knowing what your doing is asking for trouble.

There have been times when I have gotten further in my truck with out lockers than some others with lockers
My club
www.vfwdc.com
My store
Everything 4WD
86 Camms Road Cranbourne
www.everything4wd.com.au
sales@everything4wd.com.au
Phone: 03 59955055
Posts: 203
Joined: Thu Sep 25, 2003 11:28 pm
Location: Rowville. Melbourne

Post by Allan Mac »

Agree with Jonno. Have done 2 training courses; 1 with the Pajero club & other with www.safetrek.com.au at Toolangi. Both were good, but if I had to choose, safetrek.

Cheers
Allan Mac
Posts: 1187
Joined: Sat Nov 01, 2003 5:05 pm
Location: melbourne, Knoxfield

Post by matthewK »

www.pnl4wd.com.au

these people are pritty good from what i hear
1995 land rover disco on 265 muddies
Posts: 45681
Joined: Wed Nov 27, 2002 10:13 am

Post by bogged »

GUJohnno wrote:You would be better NOT getting lockers and learning as much as you can and get used to your vehicle, it's size and knowing that you can place your wheels where you want them. Lockers can get you further into the sh** and without knowing what your doing is asking for trouble.
I agree. I find it hard that people honestly believe fully kitting out their truck with every option possible can make them a better driver.

You will become a much better driver learning to drive a stock truck to its limits, then working up in stages with mods/accessories than you would the other way.

Watch a driver thats 'old school', as Johnno mentions, they actually DRIVE the section. They understand wheel placement, they actually pick their line. Not just wack in lockers, and sink the size 14 to the floor and hope.
Road Ranger
Posts: 10722
Joined: Fri Nov 12, 2004 12:21 pm
Location: In a town near you

Post by Tiny »

bogged wrote:
GUJohnno wrote:You would be better NOT getting lockers and learning as much as you can and get used to your vehicle, it's size and knowing that you can place your wheels where you want them. Lockers can get you further into the sh** and without knowing what your doing is asking for trouble.
I agree. I find it hard that people honestly believe fully kitting out their truck with every option possible can make them a better driver.
I find it very hard that some one could feel knowlegable by posting on a forum 15000 times :finger: :finger:

seriously though, driver training is a must imo. maybe a lot is comman sense, but you will most probably learn something, it might even save you in the future. Especially comoplex recoveries etc and stall recoveries
If the above post did not offend you in any way please PM me so I can try harder!!
Posts: 601
Joined: Mon May 24, 2004 9:50 am
Location: south eastern melbourne

Post by GUEEY »

bogged wrote:
GUJohnno wrote:You would be better NOT getting lockers and learning as much as you can and get used to your vehicle, it's size and knowing that you can place your wheels where you want them. Lockers can get you further into the sh** and without knowing what your doing is asking for trouble.
I agree. I find it hard that people honestly believe fully kitting out their truck with every option possible can make them a better driver.

You will become a much better driver learning to drive a stock truck to its limits, then working up in stages with mods/accessories than you would the other way.

Watch a driver thats 'old school', as Johnno mentions, they actually DRIVE the section. They understand wheel placement, they actually pick their line. Not just wack in lockers, and sink the size 14 to the floor and hope.
Competly agree with the above.

When i started offroading most of the fourbys in our club were open diff , leaf sprung vehicals.
most of the high country tracks were "bastards"(original dingo hill, butcher country, calidonia, the list could go on for ever, tracks that could have you on them all day and sometimes into the night.
"That is were we learned to drive, not with 6 inch coils and twin difflocks doing the work for you.
I often say to the yough guys coming through the club with their first car being a GQ shorty with coils and a great LSD and 4 wheel disks ansd power steer." You have not done your apprentiship untill you muscle around a fourwheel drum brake leaf sprung 40 series".
The skills and the basics need to be learned before all the gizmos go in.
i wouldnt have the skills and experience that i have today if i started with the quality of trucks easly afforded today IE Coils and twin difflocks.
Atleast even though i also have all the goodies on my own truck, i know that if the airlockes fail on a hard core drive i still know what to do.

Cheers Grant
GU III TD42T UFI18G Cross Country IC, 20 PSI. Neeeeeed mooooore Fueeeeeel.
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