Gone&DoneIt
New member
I thought I would post the info I have on the various trails and obstacles in Moab for everone. Also, if anyone is going to be in or around "Jeep Heaven" the first week in March let me know. We will be up there from the 27th through the 10th. Love to drink a cold one with any one of you. I am also posting a mod list on my Jeep for those trying to build a Moab rig... Hope to see you all on the trail!!
These are MY mods. Not necessarily the best for Moab, but they have served me very well in Jeep Nirvana...
03 TJ RUbicon
Stock Dana 44 front and rear
Stock air locker
Superior Evo front and rear axles
6" Teraflex LCG max kit.
Custom fab'd high steer kit with heim joints (chrome molly 1" OD tie rod)
35" MTR's
full weld in roll cage by KOZ 4WD
Teraflex Belly Up skid
Warn Gas Tank Skid
Shrock Works Rock Sliders
Shrock Works bumper
Warm 8000 winch
bilstein 5150 shocks 33" extended 19" collapsed
Corbeau Moab Seats (front)
Corbeau 5 point harness mounted to a Rock Hard 4x4 spreader bar behind rear seats.
Scorpion Motorsports rear tire carrier
Daystar 1" poly body lift
Custom Exhaust with single barrel flowmaster muffler
Custom OBA kit using York (Volvo) air compressor and VAIR tank
Cobra CB w 10' steel whip
Garmin Quest GPS with Mopar base hooked to a Panasonic Toughbook on a RAM laptop mount
Tom Woods drive shaft (always carry a spare).
High Lift Jack (the good one, the crappy black on snapped)
CTM joints on the axles (not on but carry as spares for when the Superior joints snap)
Volant CAI
Thumb throttle
Brute Force Clutch
Coming soon Golden Engines 4.0
Jeep 4.6L / 260hp Long Block
Peak Horsepower: 260 bhp @ 5000 rpm
Peak Torque: 295 lb/ft @ 4000 rpm
When we stay now, we rent a condo at Rim Village. For 10 nights or more is $100.00 a night, and it is a 3 bedroom condo with everything from dishes and washing machine to wireless internet.
Here's the trail guide/list I compiled for friends who are going with me when we head up: I don't gaurantee or accept liability for any of the information that follows. As always do your own research and only attempt obstacles within your vehicles and your driving capabilities. I am not responsible for any damage to you or your property based on this data. (sorry, I've already been sued once...):spank:
Golden Spike Trail
Much of the route is near the rim above Moab Valley and offers gorgeous views in all directions. Its main claim to fame, however, is that some bypasses (where they exist!) still rate a 4+.
Difficulty Rating: 4+
Scenery: Most of the trail is just atop the sloping layer of Wingate Sandstone and offers vistas to the west and north. Of note are the Colorado River canyon in the vicinity of Amasa Back, the fin country of the north end of Behind the Rocks, and Jeep Arch. The higher north end of the trail opens vistas in all directions. Especially rewarding are the breath-stopping peeks over the cliff rim toward Arches National Park. (Warning! The cliff rim here overhangs in places and has been known to fall!)
Road Surface: The easy parts are layered broken rock and dirt, while the challenges are solid rock ledges. There is some slickrock, but it is those short, vertical sections that favor tall tires and locking differentials.
Obstacles: After passing the 4-rated Poison Spider Mesa obstacles there is some easy slickrock fin driving with one very steep uphill (the Launching Pad) and one steep downhill. There are tight turns in a canyon bottom and one short slickrock ledge, followed by a long stretch of ups and downs over broken rock, with a few sharp steps. The Golden Crack marks the beginning of the final nasty mile to Gold Bar Rim. Highlights are the Golden Steps, Golden Ramp, Double Whammy, and the Body Snatcher. Bring only the best of equipment; the tow truck can't make it.
Moab Rim Trail
The Moab Rim is the cliff rim seen just to the southwest of town. Its only four-wheel-drive access begins just downriver from town and the first mile has about the highest density of obstacles of any of the area trails. Many vehicles have "bit the rocks" on the succession of rock ledges and tight turns that lead to the rim. On top, the trail is sand and rock as it leaves the rim, but it returns at another overlook. A spur, sometimes used, visits Indian ruins and rock art. After closing a short loop, the trail returns on the same rocky mile it started with. A formerly used trail loop to the famous Egg Ranch Fin and Death Row has been closed for more than ten years to all motorized travel by BLM's Resource Management Plan. Approximate mileage: 12 total, 7 off highway.
Difficulty Rating: 4+
Scenery: The first mile of trail follows the slope of the tilted rock layers and has increasingly high overlooks of the Colorado River gorge in one of its most beautiful areas. The rim view includes the La Sal Mountains, Moab and Spanish Valleys, some of Arches National Park and distant features such as the Book Cliffs. Behind the rim are displays of rock domes and fins and some of the rims of the Colorado River gorge farther downstream.
Road Surface: The first part of the trail is mostly on bedrock that nature has broken into ledges and steps. The higher country has slickrock, blow sand, and some sandy dirt with broken rock mixed in.
Obstacles: Highlights among the many steps in the first mile are the Devils Crack and the Z-Turn. The former requires a tricky turn onto a ledge to avoid dropping a wheel into the crack beyond, and the latter has two turns over irregular rocks and ledges. On top, a slickrock dome has an optional climb with about 85 percent grade. Excellent ground clearance and large diameter tires are useful throughout, and a locking or limited-slip differential helps a lot.
Hell's Revenge Trail (My absolute Favorite)...
This premier slickrock trail lies northeast of town between the Sand Flats Road and the river. The trail is clearly visible on the sandy parts of the route, but there are long stretches of slickrock where the 4WD trail has only recently been marked (a yellow paint design that resembles a flame). The most difficult obstacles are well out of the stock-vehicle class, but the worst ones have easy bypasses. There are steep climbs and descents and some edges that are not for the faint of heart. In a few places, the trail crosses the now-famous "Slickrock Bike Trail," a motorcycle and mountain-bicycle trail. The Lion's Back and Potato Salad Hill are nearby.
Difficulty Rating: 4+
Scenery: The large vistas sweep full circle from the La Sal Mountains through Arches National Park to the cliff rims that overlook Moab Valley. The nearby country is an amazing stretch of bare sandstone with clefts and canyons, including the Colorado River canyon.
Road Surface: In addition to the slickrock, there are rock ledges, broken rock, sandy dirt, and a little blow sand.
Obstacles: The first clump of slickrock has high mounds and steep descents that lead to a second mound that does the same thing. The major slickrock area includes steep climbs, sharp turns, and a hair-raising descent along a steep ridge with little room for error left or right. "Tip-Over Challenge" is a brief rock hill with a sandy base that requires tight maneuvering, an excellent line of attack, some help in the differentials, or the easy bypass on a slickrock fin. Just above Tip-Over is a shortcut to avoid the final hill, called "Rubble Trouble" because of its large loose rocks and a couple of tough ledges.
Another option is to drive "Tip-Toe through Hell." It follows most of the Hell's Revenge trail route but skips the difficult obstacles and is rated a 3½. The scenery and many of the thrills of driving long stretches of slickrock remain, but the emphasis is on making the trail accessible to stock vehicles and drivers not anxious to break their equipment.
WP # Latitude Longitude Description Mileage
1 N 38°33.905' W 109°32.084' Intersection of Sand Flats Road and Mill Creek Rive
2 N 38°34.565' W 109°31.464' Start Hell's Revenge (left turn off Sand Flats Road) 0.0
3 N 38°34.599' W 109°31.464' Dump Bump (our trail went up the easier east end) 0.1
4 N 38°34.864' W 109°31.787' Right Turn 0.5
5 N 38°34.986' W 109°31.801' Top of First Slick Rock Mound 0.7
6 N 38°35.258' W 109°32.036' Right Turn Off Slick Rock onto Sand Trail 1.3
7 N 38°35.341' W 109°32.007' Right at Y 1.4
8 N 38°35.796' W 109°31.913' Right at Y 2.0
9 N 38°36.464' W 109°32.138' Colorado River Overlook (Hell's Gate just a little S and W) 2.8
10 N 38°36.083' W 109°32.037' Right Turn off Overlook Spur 3.3
11 N 38°35.551' W 109°32.560' Bath Tub AKA Car Wash Obstacle 4.6
12 N 38°35.629' W 109°32.406' Mickey's Hot Tub Optional Obstacle 4.9
13 N 38°35.628' W 109°32.309' Long Steep Drop 5.0
14 N 38°35.241' W 109°32.515' Tip Over Challenge Obstacle 5.7
15 N 38°35.157' W 109°32.662 Rubble Hill 6.5
16 N 38°35.079' W 109°32.490' Right Turn 6.6
17 N 38°35.020' W 109°32.538' Left Turn 6.7
18 N 38°34.708' W 109°32.085' Right Turn 7.4
19 N 38°34.197' W 109°31.544' Sand Flats Road 8.2
These are MY mods. Not necessarily the best for Moab, but they have served me very well in Jeep Nirvana...
03 TJ RUbicon
Stock Dana 44 front and rear
Stock air locker
Superior Evo front and rear axles
6" Teraflex LCG max kit.
Custom fab'd high steer kit with heim joints (chrome molly 1" OD tie rod)
35" MTR's
full weld in roll cage by KOZ 4WD
Teraflex Belly Up skid
Warn Gas Tank Skid
Shrock Works Rock Sliders
Shrock Works bumper
Warm 8000 winch
bilstein 5150 shocks 33" extended 19" collapsed
Corbeau Moab Seats (front)
Corbeau 5 point harness mounted to a Rock Hard 4x4 spreader bar behind rear seats.
Scorpion Motorsports rear tire carrier
Daystar 1" poly body lift
Custom Exhaust with single barrel flowmaster muffler
Custom OBA kit using York (Volvo) air compressor and VAIR tank
Cobra CB w 10' steel whip
Garmin Quest GPS with Mopar base hooked to a Panasonic Toughbook on a RAM laptop mount
Tom Woods drive shaft (always carry a spare).
High Lift Jack (the good one, the crappy black on snapped)
CTM joints on the axles (not on but carry as spares for when the Superior joints snap)
Volant CAI
Thumb throttle
Brute Force Clutch
Coming soon Golden Engines 4.0
Jeep 4.6L / 260hp Long Block
Peak Horsepower: 260 bhp @ 5000 rpm
Peak Torque: 295 lb/ft @ 4000 rpm
When we stay now, we rent a condo at Rim Village. For 10 nights or more is $100.00 a night, and it is a 3 bedroom condo with everything from dishes and washing machine to wireless internet.
Here's the trail guide/list I compiled for friends who are going with me when we head up: I don't gaurantee or accept liability for any of the information that follows. As always do your own research and only attempt obstacles within your vehicles and your driving capabilities. I am not responsible for any damage to you or your property based on this data. (sorry, I've already been sued once...):spank:
Golden Spike Trail
Much of the route is near the rim above Moab Valley and offers gorgeous views in all directions. Its main claim to fame, however, is that some bypasses (where they exist!) still rate a 4+.
Difficulty Rating: 4+
Scenery: Most of the trail is just atop the sloping layer of Wingate Sandstone and offers vistas to the west and north. Of note are the Colorado River canyon in the vicinity of Amasa Back, the fin country of the north end of Behind the Rocks, and Jeep Arch. The higher north end of the trail opens vistas in all directions. Especially rewarding are the breath-stopping peeks over the cliff rim toward Arches National Park. (Warning! The cliff rim here overhangs in places and has been known to fall!)
Road Surface: The easy parts are layered broken rock and dirt, while the challenges are solid rock ledges. There is some slickrock, but it is those short, vertical sections that favor tall tires and locking differentials.
Obstacles: After passing the 4-rated Poison Spider Mesa obstacles there is some easy slickrock fin driving with one very steep uphill (the Launching Pad) and one steep downhill. There are tight turns in a canyon bottom and one short slickrock ledge, followed by a long stretch of ups and downs over broken rock, with a few sharp steps. The Golden Crack marks the beginning of the final nasty mile to Gold Bar Rim. Highlights are the Golden Steps, Golden Ramp, Double Whammy, and the Body Snatcher. Bring only the best of equipment; the tow truck can't make it.
Moab Rim Trail
The Moab Rim is the cliff rim seen just to the southwest of town. Its only four-wheel-drive access begins just downriver from town and the first mile has about the highest density of obstacles of any of the area trails. Many vehicles have "bit the rocks" on the succession of rock ledges and tight turns that lead to the rim. On top, the trail is sand and rock as it leaves the rim, but it returns at another overlook. A spur, sometimes used, visits Indian ruins and rock art. After closing a short loop, the trail returns on the same rocky mile it started with. A formerly used trail loop to the famous Egg Ranch Fin and Death Row has been closed for more than ten years to all motorized travel by BLM's Resource Management Plan. Approximate mileage: 12 total, 7 off highway.
Difficulty Rating: 4+
Scenery: The first mile of trail follows the slope of the tilted rock layers and has increasingly high overlooks of the Colorado River gorge in one of its most beautiful areas. The rim view includes the La Sal Mountains, Moab and Spanish Valleys, some of Arches National Park and distant features such as the Book Cliffs. Behind the rim are displays of rock domes and fins and some of the rims of the Colorado River gorge farther downstream.
Road Surface: The first part of the trail is mostly on bedrock that nature has broken into ledges and steps. The higher country has slickrock, blow sand, and some sandy dirt with broken rock mixed in.
Obstacles: Highlights among the many steps in the first mile are the Devils Crack and the Z-Turn. The former requires a tricky turn onto a ledge to avoid dropping a wheel into the crack beyond, and the latter has two turns over irregular rocks and ledges. On top, a slickrock dome has an optional climb with about 85 percent grade. Excellent ground clearance and large diameter tires are useful throughout, and a locking or limited-slip differential helps a lot.
Hell's Revenge Trail (My absolute Favorite)...
This premier slickrock trail lies northeast of town between the Sand Flats Road and the river. The trail is clearly visible on the sandy parts of the route, but there are long stretches of slickrock where the 4WD trail has only recently been marked (a yellow paint design that resembles a flame). The most difficult obstacles are well out of the stock-vehicle class, but the worst ones have easy bypasses. There are steep climbs and descents and some edges that are not for the faint of heart. In a few places, the trail crosses the now-famous "Slickrock Bike Trail," a motorcycle and mountain-bicycle trail. The Lion's Back and Potato Salad Hill are nearby.
Difficulty Rating: 4+
Scenery: The large vistas sweep full circle from the La Sal Mountains through Arches National Park to the cliff rims that overlook Moab Valley. The nearby country is an amazing stretch of bare sandstone with clefts and canyons, including the Colorado River canyon.
Road Surface: In addition to the slickrock, there are rock ledges, broken rock, sandy dirt, and a little blow sand.
Obstacles: The first clump of slickrock has high mounds and steep descents that lead to a second mound that does the same thing. The major slickrock area includes steep climbs, sharp turns, and a hair-raising descent along a steep ridge with little room for error left or right. "Tip-Over Challenge" is a brief rock hill with a sandy base that requires tight maneuvering, an excellent line of attack, some help in the differentials, or the easy bypass on a slickrock fin. Just above Tip-Over is a shortcut to avoid the final hill, called "Rubble Trouble" because of its large loose rocks and a couple of tough ledges.
Another option is to drive "Tip-Toe through Hell." It follows most of the Hell's Revenge trail route but skips the difficult obstacles and is rated a 3½. The scenery and many of the thrills of driving long stretches of slickrock remain, but the emphasis is on making the trail accessible to stock vehicles and drivers not anxious to break their equipment.
WP # Latitude Longitude Description Mileage
1 N 38°33.905' W 109°32.084' Intersection of Sand Flats Road and Mill Creek Rive
2 N 38°34.565' W 109°31.464' Start Hell's Revenge (left turn off Sand Flats Road) 0.0
3 N 38°34.599' W 109°31.464' Dump Bump (our trail went up the easier east end) 0.1
4 N 38°34.864' W 109°31.787' Right Turn 0.5
5 N 38°34.986' W 109°31.801' Top of First Slick Rock Mound 0.7
6 N 38°35.258' W 109°32.036' Right Turn Off Slick Rock onto Sand Trail 1.3
7 N 38°35.341' W 109°32.007' Right at Y 1.4
8 N 38°35.796' W 109°31.913' Right at Y 2.0
9 N 38°36.464' W 109°32.138' Colorado River Overlook (Hell's Gate just a little S and W) 2.8
10 N 38°36.083' W 109°32.037' Right Turn off Overlook Spur 3.3
11 N 38°35.551' W 109°32.560' Bath Tub AKA Car Wash Obstacle 4.6
12 N 38°35.629' W 109°32.406' Mickey's Hot Tub Optional Obstacle 4.9
13 N 38°35.628' W 109°32.309' Long Steep Drop 5.0
14 N 38°35.241' W 109°32.515' Tip Over Challenge Obstacle 5.7
15 N 38°35.157' W 109°32.662 Rubble Hill 6.5
16 N 38°35.079' W 109°32.490' Right Turn 6.6
17 N 38°35.020' W 109°32.538' Left Turn 6.7
18 N 38°34.708' W 109°32.085' Right Turn 7.4
19 N 38°34.197' W 109°31.544' Sand Flats Road 8.2