*"You need a LIFT!! He beat the crap out of his Lexus!!" You **_WISH_** this Lexus was beat up:* kzbin.info/www/bejne/h4OViKd8i6mGhKc
@MrJoelinq772 ай бұрын
Don't need a lift, then shows you why you need a lift as he beats the shit out of his lexus
@caribooskidoo39972 ай бұрын
So true. Just spend your lift money on skidplates!
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
@@MrJoelinq77 Uhh is this Lexus "beat up"?? ...or do you sooooooooo badly want to _imagine_ that it's "beat up" to justify your jealousy? 😉✌️ The Overglampers get so obsessed with skids, then are afraid to use them... oh the irony 😆 🤣
@spec242 ай бұрын
@@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADthe irony is the myriad stupid comments you make in this video showing you have zero clue what you're talking about. Or to pu**y to actually go anywhere.
@clwombleАй бұрын
@@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADyou didn’t notice or see the bodywork hitting the rocks? The sudden stop at the very beginning of the clip when something underneath hit the rocks?
@portlavacaboyАй бұрын
I'd just like to see the underside of this Lexus after an off road adventure in Moab or Sand Hollow State park in Utah. This video would be more entertaining without the OP's obnoxious "outrage" towards overlander owners.
@atubeviewer4942Ай бұрын
MORAL of this story is, NEVER buy a white lexus gx460 from this guy.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@atubeviewer4942 why? it's only got like 24k and it's still under factory warranty
@gbs7144Ай бұрын
😂
@mojrimibnharb4584Ай бұрын
@@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD Not after that clip gets out...
@ruck-a-tronАй бұрын
I wouldn't buy a 4x4 from any of these overlanders either.
@markthomas87665 күн бұрын
@@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD No one believes you.
@FatalAnimal2 ай бұрын
Overlanding went from car camping as its main focus to gear collecting as its main focus.
@youtubecarspottersguide12 ай бұрын
yes a mattress in back of a wagon or pick up with a shell /toper , lawn chairs ,Colman stove igloo cooler we where set
@Jay-me7gw2 ай бұрын
@@youtubecarspottersguide1 I built a platform in the back of my F150 6.5' bed and put two of those Home Depot foam mattresses down. Made a queen sized bed and it was awesome for camping. All our gear fit under the platform. Then we had a kid. . . . made a little crib out of 2x4's that went across the bed rails so that he was elevated over our feet. Tried it once. There was just too much crap that had to come along with the baby to comfortably stuff it in the truck and so we end up buying a camper. Especially if you are in bear country and have to bring everytthing inside the truck at night.
@youtubecarspottersguide12 ай бұрын
@@Jay-me7gw love my ram single cab 6.5' box , all the same size next would be a single cab 8' box 4x4 not many sold ,suburban 4x4 has 6' behind the2nd row ,or chevy express van
@skateforleisure2 ай бұрын
As with any niche
@D.Dragoon2 ай бұрын
Maybe see collecting gear like fashion. We don't necessarily want to be a slave of fashion but also no one wants to be out of fashion
@TheVoiceofTheProphetElizer2 ай бұрын
"The Overlanding Industrial Complex" - I have not laughed that hard in a while.
@MyBrotherInYahusha2 ай бұрын
He's not wrong...
@chrisw3088Ай бұрын
Yeah like Overland expo which is like a tourist trap. Its ridiculous with all the sales and junk. If you really get out on the trails you will see the garbage that people buy without ever needing it. It's a shame. I only went to the expo once in AZ. Never again.
@followtheciaenceАй бұрын
"overglampers" 😂🎉
@williamd189121 күн бұрын
Big Overlanding hates this one simple trick.
@runningoutofroad8 күн бұрын
Twas a good line 😅
@abstractholiday2 ай бұрын
The more built the rig, the closer it stays to the driveway or mall. When you get way way out there, it’s usually hunters in a 1986 Dodge Dakota on bald highway tires that you find at the end of the trail.
@thecryptidsden2 ай бұрын
Nah, you can tell the pavement princess from the real off road rigs and the better you can build the father you can go into crazy 💩
@Psyco9132 ай бұрын
@@thecryptidsdenIt doesn't take an overbuilt rig to get to the end of most trails. It takes a good driver. And if you would like to get home as well, it still doesn't take all the extra mods and gear. It takes a reliable vehicle and some basic mechanical knowledge for those instances where you do break something.
@LiterallyOverTheHillAdventures2 ай бұрын
When I drive from Georgia to turkey hunt in the Gila National Forest in New Mexico for two weeks and live out of my vehicle and maybe do some fly fishing if I limit out early, or to Superior National Forest in Minnesota to grouse hunt and fly fish for salmon and steelhead it will be over built. Lots of weight is involved to live out of a vehicle, off grid for two weeks on some sketchy trails 40 or more miles from the nearest pavement. Yeah, I can get back there in any decent off-road vehicle, but can I carry the food, water, fuel and all the other gear to live out of it for two weeks? Not to mention being comfortable with the ability to move my camp rather easily as often as the situation dictates?
@digitalperson1082 ай бұрын
It’s a truck. ‘Rig’ smh
@digitalperson1082 ай бұрын
@@LiterallyOverTheHillAdventuresthat sir, is a different use case and practically dictates your needs. Not gonna lie, wish I had the locale and time to do those adventures. Enjoy!
@northamericannomad78222 ай бұрын
It’s painful to admit, but you’re absolutely right.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
@northamericannomad7822 it doesn't need to be painful ❤️ 🕊 🌼 🌸 🌻 🌹✌️ 🙏
@tr-lj2vx2 ай бұрын
He isn't right and he is putting forth some very dangerous advice. He is correct about people buying a bunch of stuff that they don't need. As he expands what he is saying, it becomes crystal clear that this man is our dream client... I'm part of an off-road club who does off-road vehicle recovery. I'm also a van lifer who tows a chopped F350. It's my trail rig. Anyway, this guy is telling people to dump the recovery gear because he never uses it... He never uses it because he never goes on trails hard enough to where it would be needed. But soon enough he will end up in a situation he can't get himself out of and he will call me to come save him... For a minimum of $450 to come out, $100 an hour to get him out of the situation. $8 per mile to tow his rig to a shop and if he were nice, a case of beer for me and my friends to enjoy out on the trails... all on his dime. This man is literally how we fund our rigs and trips lol.
@Ryan-dc6lj2 ай бұрын
@@tr-lj2vx I was wondering the same. Most "overlanding" is people driving down short, high-traffic offroad trails, where most of this stuff is frivolous (but perhaps not 100% unnecessary). When I think of overlanding, I think of multi-day, backcountry trips where some of this crap would actually be very handy. The appeal here is to the people doing shorter stuff. The point he's making is Experience + Correct Car + Planning > Minimal Mods > Jewelry.
@tr-lj2vx2 ай бұрын
@@Ryan-dc6lj But telling people not to take recovery gear shows how little knowledge this man has when it comes to overloading. Even a short ten mile trip into a desert canyon road could end up in a situation where there is no cellphone, 120 degree heat, and not a single person coming down that trail for a month. Colorado is much the same, an unexpected snow storm could have a person trapped... You don't need the racks, the shiny rims, brush guards etc. but going out with little or no recovery gear, pure stupidity.
@Ryan-dc6lj2 ай бұрын
@@tr-lj2vx yea simple recovery is equivalent to having ATs and skid-plates. I keep a compressor, hitch ring, and a cheap kinetic rope in a box. Never needed to be pulled out though. Really I think the point is that we don't need thousands of pounds of overkill gear and to just go with the basics.
@JeffCleverley2 ай бұрын
That's because Americans have confused overlanding with off road car camping... The US version, lower 48 certainly, you are never far from tarmac and services... But overlanding did exist decades ago, it comes from Australia, Africa, Asia, and still exists, and requires equipment that helps when you are actually away from civilisation... So yeah, spot on, you are not overlanding...
@rhyoliterick2 ай бұрын
Yep I spoke to this in my comment. traveling "over land" - over landing is not going to a camp ground for the weekend and sleeping in your car or going off roading.
@Nolo2452 ай бұрын
To be fair, there are still areas in the lower 48 where real overlanding is possible and there are some people that do build out for overseas adventures. The places you mention are absolutely a different beast though. "Overlanding" here has gotten mixed up with caravaning culture. For what most of these people actually wanna do, they'd be better served with a caravan towing a 4-wheeler
@Bryan-li8qiАй бұрын
never far from tarmac and services is great when you're talking about a vehicle that isn't broken down on the trail. 4 hours in by car and 113 degrees out in the Southwest....ain't no body making it 40 miles on foot in those temps without enough water. So if you're 25 hours from pavement in the outback or 4 hours from pavement in Utah. A broken rig and no cell service with dwindling supplies is gonna be deadly either way without a satellite communicator. and at that point, the argument of tarmac and service is moot. only reason your ass is being saved is because you were smart enough to know satellite is your best option. So without it, you're likely dead in either situation.....don't go at it alone, or if you do, have a satellite back up.
@MrOscarLong2 ай бұрын
Real overlanders go to war zones or 3rd world countries in Toyota Hiluxes! 😂😂😂
@JamesJones-xk9xx2 ай бұрын
Shit! Was I overlanding in Afghanistan and Iraq? Damn!
@themischievousdutchman2 ай бұрын
@@JamesJones-xk9xx did you sleep in a tent, if the answer is yes, you were overlanding 😂
@paulguinto51502 ай бұрын
I slept under my humvee or on the hood with just my poncho liner or sometimes my sleeping bag on top of me. We don’t sleep inside the bag in the war zone!
@anthonyms30492 ай бұрын
I overland in central america with a stock, no-airbag jimny and a regular tent lol.
@josiahwyncott7519Ай бұрын
The Taliban are the original Instagram off-roaders.
@sludgetrudgerАй бұрын
Oooofff I've never been kicked in the nuts by a video. Well played sir. Seriously though. This is a very well thought out and informed video. I am one of those rigged out overbuilt Jeepers. I spend most of my days off in the bush either with my Jeep or SxS. I do admit I don't need a lot of the crap I have but after decades of growing up in the bush and spending time far from civilization I have been in situations where I did get stranded and had to find my way back to civilization. So it's more of a sense of security and "what if" than practicality. Loved the video and subscribed. Cheers from Northern Ontario Canada 🇨🇦
@TAkEdA3126 күн бұрын
Exactly. Going off road and away from civilization means you need to be self sufficient. This guy clearly doesn't do that since he doesn't need anything but a stock vehicle. Must think AAA will come save him.
@bd1875Ай бұрын
Much respect for anyone who drives their lexus like that.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@@bd1875 🙏 ❤️ ✌️ known worldwide as the Landcruiser Prado
@roshangomez2 ай бұрын
Aside from speaking facts, I am impressed by the quality of this video especially considering it is a small channel. Keep going 🙌🏾
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much 🙂
@norkisserrano2 ай бұрын
There is no wrong setup, every setup is a result of your needs according to what you have experienced, then you know what you want on your setup and you needed. Like an awning, you might not need it, but I do. Come with us on a week adventure on a freezing temperature and you will realize how comfortable my setup is, do not mock people’s rig setup because your type of adventure is not the same as ours or others, let us just respect each others way of adventures because everyone of us have a different level of Overland adventure. If That’s the type of adventure you want then so be it and I respect that.
@alaska1girls2 ай бұрын
He's hardly alone in this assesment ive seen other videos by other “ Overlanders” and they more or less say the same thing, most of the cools stuff people are sold is marketing and not necissity. He’s not critical of your set up he’s critical of the gear collecting.
@TerraFirmaX2 ай бұрын
I agree 100%. He's right that you don't need all the stuff to go camping, but I enjoy all the stuff and gear, it's fun to me and i use all of it. And Im not bashing my vehicle on the rocks to prove I don't need a lift.
@VNDLZR2 ай бұрын
Yup 👏🏻
@norkisserrano2 ай бұрын
@@alaska1girls -Yes including the gears, we brought gears because we needed them, and people have different needs according to the comfort level on their adventures they want. Let’s just respect each other’s setup or gears we bring, some people wants to bring high lift jack while others wants bottle jack or some would bring rotopax for extra fuel while others don’t… so be it, what’s important is we go out there to explore and adventure in the wild and we have everything we need for self reliance.
@MotoringAdventures_KE7SAI2 ай бұрын
@@norkisserrano This!! ☝☝☝💯
@gmjent56712 ай бұрын
Living in central Texas there’s as many decked out lifted jeeps as there is pickup trucks in an area that has no public land, unless you own a ranch with rough terrain they are just grocery getters.
Have me singing the Barbie song "I used to float now I just fall down" I mean "I used to drive now I just buy gear"
@bc41982 ай бұрын
We had a pretty cool motorized Barbie quad, back in like 1993 😅
@MotoringAdventures_KE7SAI2 ай бұрын
That had my dying! lol
@mojavedesertsonorandesert9531Ай бұрын
👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 Well said! 😂
@andyapplebee60602 ай бұрын
Agree with this video 100%, but the idea of not setting up a tent on the ground in the sand while it’s windy still sounds good.
@g__wizz2 ай бұрын
Stay in your house then lol. Setting up a 4x4 rv in a scenic remote part of where ever seems sac religious and counter intuitive to the premise all together.
@andyapplebee60602 ай бұрын
@@g__wizz I get it except I’ve been backpacking wilderness and backcountry since I was a little kid. Setting up tents in the dirt, or just sleeping on the ground. I have a family of 5 now, and maybe we just want to do a quick trip in the truck without so much hassle, so we can spend some extra time enjoying each other’s company. We’re already cheating by using a 4x4 anyways. Original “overlanding” was, and always will be on foot in my opinion. I think a lot of the extra tech is cosplay. But some of it does serve a practical purpose in my opinion.
@g__wizz2 ай бұрын
@@andyapplebee6060 apply the same rules for good backpacking technique, light weight/minimalism also function/necessity to dictate mods and you will see most of the overland stuff come up short on a vehicle.
@KABOBkabob2 ай бұрын
but then you gotta find a level spot for your car
@andyapplebee60602 ай бұрын
@@g__wizz yep I get it and I’m that guy, but you can take it to extremes either way. Some gear and technology serves us well in the right circumstances. In my scenario I’m trying to create a reasonably comfortable situation that will allow my family to enjoy the outdoors. I don’t even have a rooftop tent or anything like that. I’m just saying I’m open to it. It would make managing myself and 4 others much less stressful in many scenarios.
@davecorley868023 күн бұрын
This may be the best overlanding video I've ever seen. Love it!
@eliceovelazquez2004Ай бұрын
I think this video really needed to be made, thanks for finally pointing this out. And yes you forgot the snorkel hahaha great video !!!
@ZetaDogProductions2 ай бұрын
"Overlanding Barbie playset." 💀 Keep up the good work, amigo!
@minthos4045Ай бұрын
Thanks for pointing out the obvious unspoken truth. My approach is to go out with what I have and only buy things if I genuinely feel the need after camping few times.
@DouglasGreen5622 ай бұрын
That's ME ! 🤣 I totally have a four star hotel in the back 🤣The thing I am trying to compensate for is getting too old to safely paddle Class IV rapids. Sure I am getting old and broken down but my truck can totally fill that emotional void. I should name it "The Compensator"
@zsuzsuspetals2 ай бұрын
It's admirable to have such self awareness and honesty. Seriously. I can absolutely see how easy it would be to get sucked into gadgets. My husband and I are both that way and I'm worse than he is. 🤣
@DouglasGreen5622 ай бұрын
@@zsuzsuspetals It's probably a safe bet that anyone from a backpacking or kayaking background realizes how little we actually need in order to have a great outdoor experience. Hec, just camping out of a vehicle of any kind is an absolute luxury 😁
@eddydubois44112 ай бұрын
I second that
@andrewdevries98482 ай бұрын
🤣 Great name!
@margygАй бұрын
The people whining about purposefully built trucks/suvs are the ones who apparently never gone on a trip where to they needed haul water, extra gas, propane, or have had to use max trax & a shovel for self recovery.
@dontall71Ай бұрын
@margyg, Like people in Western North Carolina!
@richardc.3513Ай бұрын
So true, I have a lot of recovery gear and have used every single piece already. I travel by myself and must be capable of self-recovery.
@ItspronouncedAaron2 ай бұрын
Did we just awaken in the Overlanding Matrix? Morpheus? Is that you? I’m ready to tent camp 🏕️
@thecryptidsden2 ай бұрын
Overlanding doesn't mean or require a RTT, I overland in an old beater and ground camp because I go off-roading after setting up camp
@digitalperson1082 ай бұрын
It’s not overlanding at all. I mean I “overland” every day just walking around. It’s camping plain and simple. But “overlanding” sounds so much more impressive, and this is merica. Always ego. A dirt road to even a dispersed site is not “overlanding”. So ridiculous really.
@stevengrey19482 ай бұрын
Years ago when my family first moved to Colorado we decided to go hiking one weekend and to explore our new home state. We made a wrong turn and ended up on a “jeep” trail in a family sedan. My dad being a rather skilled driver and knowledgeable on how to handle off road situations navigated us home with no problems. Hard core jeep guys were cheering us on for getting out in nature and followed us out just to make sure we didn’t get stuck. Congratulated my dad for handling the car skillfully and gave us directions home. You don’t need the stuff… you need the skill
@JonFox1945Ай бұрын
My first off road trail was in my Prius lol, and it was snowing. I now have a decently modded 4runner but still good times
@geshem1001Ай бұрын
that's awesome! Great job Dad!
@NormanDimmickАй бұрын
I cut my teeth offroading in a lil Hyundai Sonata out of necessity, and as a result I've yet to encounter something my almost stock truck can't handle--it may not have the clearance to handle everything gracefully (hence my one mod being skidplates), but it does it. Every vehicle is going to have its limits, but experience and good line choice go farther than any modification, and up to a point, goes further even than vehicle choice.
@unfineartist29 күн бұрын
this is the most honest break down of off roading that ive ever heard,, genius i might say,... please do a roast of the sprinter vans next... :D
@TexasVexes2 ай бұрын
I always laugh when I see people commuting with all that shit on the back of their new TRD Tacoma.
@westcoastplinkin65592 ай бұрын
Well when a disaster hits, they will definitely be prepared.
@Drewcardello2 ай бұрын
I bet they take it a few miles offroad every 3 years.
@Wanderer25Ай бұрын
@@westcoastplinkin6559 If disaster really hits there would be no gas for those 11mpg rigs with all that gear.
@westcoastplinkin6559Ай бұрын
@@Wanderer25 You ever heard of Jerry cans? Watch footage from the Hawaii fires and see how people relied on those 4x4s. I always stick to the philosophy of, "it's better to have it and not need it, than to need it and not have it".
@richardc.3513Ай бұрын
True, and hopefully they have the knowledge to use it safely. 👍🏼
@craigbehnke1986Ай бұрын
Agree with some, not with all, but a good overall message in the video. My experience was that I bought (mostly overbought) gear before I knew if I really needed it because I didn't have a mentor or teacher with experience to guide me. Overbuying gear was a crutch when I was less experienced. The more experience I got, my gear became more purposeful and need based. It's amazing how far a stock 4runner or Jeep will get you with a tent, canopy, small grill, and some bins packed nicely in the back.
@ironman3023Ай бұрын
I want to thank you for being real. You have given me a new perspective on overlanding. I am brand new to this and don’t make much money and I was freaking out at the cost for the type of vehicle and gear that I thought I needed. After watching this I realised I don’t need all the over hyped bs if I just want to hit some easy and simple trails. Thank you and I will repay your honesty by subscribing and supporting your channel. Keep up the good work 😊
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@@ironman3023 Thank you for subscribing.. this video is for people like you... 😃 we get some negative comments for exposing the truth, but enough is enough ❤️ ✌️
@DaveScottADV2 ай бұрын
I think all of the motorcycle "Adventure Riders" figured out that they can cram more junk in an SUV than a BMW 1200GS
@valiantone3952 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@jt42772 ай бұрын
“Overlanding” is best related to what began in Australia decades ago, where sleeping on the ground is too close to so many things that will kill you. The main difference between overlanding and car camping is that car camping is typically in a campground and overlanding is typically dispersed camping. You’ll need to bring things like water and be more self-sufficient. Agree that most of the gear is unnecessary and undesirable. Learn how to drive off-road before you start overloading your vehicle with hundreds of pounds of gear. I took my stock 4Runner with Michelin street tires through Imogene Pass, and it would’ve been harder with additional weight and a higher center of gravity. I have a smaller ARB compressor so I can air down my tires for better traction. To me, the rooftop tent is the worst - I built a simple sleeping platform in the back and got some bug netting for the windows because I prefer to sleep inside the vehicle. I also prefer a small fridge and a small battery pack to keep it powered versus a cooler. Less is better, but a rear locker would be nice.
@dennisfullinwider79302 ай бұрын
Absolutely, sleeping off the ground away from creepy crawlers, slitherers, and fanged clawed mammals regardless of size is an absolute necessity. Ask me how know? Not to mention mid night thunder storms with 50 mph gales.
@karl50562 ай бұрын
This guy is speaking BRUTAL truth. I think all of us-men, need to hear this type of message from another guy. Sincerely, listening to this guy's message can save a person a s*it ton of cash. BRAVO to this guy.
@romeored38892 ай бұрын
I think what he said is a little overboard. Especially when he said guys were “overcompensating” buy buying all of that stuff. “Overlanding” is a hobby so who’s to say what they can and cannot spend their hard earned money on? Guys like this? No to each their own I say and do whatever makes you happy. Also if someone says someone else is overcompensating for something most likely that individual is very self conscious.
@asiandwanemeighan64792 ай бұрын
Gear addiction is a real thing.
@johncarter9054Ай бұрын
What a loser. Spends all his money on a station wagon and then hacks on people who go prepared. Loser.
@lunamaria10482 ай бұрын
I am just 4'10, 99 lbs woman, so for 12 years with two 5th gen 4Runners, my overlanding was folding the rear seats down and sleeping in the back of my 4Runners on a mattress made to fit in a 4Runner with seats down lol. My only mods were KO2s, and for my 2019 TRD OR, the Magnuson supercharger, KO2s and a long range gas tank, for longer more remote expeditions into the mountains. I had no light bars or anything like that. I used a portable lithium battery for charging my phone, flashlight, laptop etc, some easy to make food like (MRE type easy), water and could go overlanding up to a week, just like that. I live in British Columbia with 2 bear species, record size moose, wolves and mountain lions. I'm not sleeping on the roof lol. I was a car camper lol I have a GX 550 Overtrail now, and look forward to torture testing it Great video!
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
@@lunamaria1048 Thank you for your happy 😃 comment... enjoy your new GX550 OT! ❤️ 😍 💖
@lunamaria10482 ай бұрын
@@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD Sure! I always like your perspectives. I have been car camping for 16 years, long before KZbin made it a trend called "overlanding" lol. I'll never understand why KZbin "overlanders" need to bring everything, (including the kitchen sink) with them, and the supplies to cook Michelin star gourmet meals 😂 I'll admit I am interested in the added benefit of being ably to plug in to and use hybrid battery power, while car camping, but waiting to see if the GX 550 will get a hybrid model! If not, I'll make due with my portable battery pack lol Thanks!
@Circa7602 ай бұрын
What is so great about this video?
@lunamaria10482 ай бұрын
@@Circa760 Shared perspective, and a beautiful GX 460. If you are looking to quench your thirst with Haterade, you won't find any here😊
@soosilly79Ай бұрын
Yup, city dwellers looking for a break in the pretentious life they chose and they still can't see all that equipment represents the stress they are trying to escape
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@soosilly79 you hit the nail on the head! They are bringing the cubicle with them.. their ball and chains... some trails look like traffic-jams on the weekends... plugged up for miles with overglampers re-creating the 5-day rat-race on the trails... the irony
@kurtbeck58092 ай бұрын
This marketing of creating perceived needs of off roading has created a whole industry and a new revenue stream for automotive manufacturers. I used to drive my old 1971 Plymouth Satellite on dirt roads and slept in the back seat. Had water and a shovel in the truck and amazingly went to few out of the way places and had a great time. Then drove that same car to work...Had no money for specialized equipment . You have shown what a mostly stock vehicle can do with some careful driving.
@PittiesAndMore2 ай бұрын
It's just like the car enthusiast industry. Everyone can get by with a Prius. No one needs to modify their car to make it faster, make it handle better, and look better and to make it your own. That's what car enthusiasts have doing since the horseless carriage was invented. The "Overlanding Industrial Complex" creates jobs and opportunities in small businesses in America. 🤷🏽♂️ That front bumper, skid plate, undercarriage protection, rear tire carrier, after-market wheels made in the USA, recovery gear made in the USA, and the rest of the overlanding gear help the American economy. That's capitalism. 🤷🏽♂️ I have a GX, and it's tight on space, especially when you pack your family and two 70 lbs dogs. I'm glad to have a roof rack and storage boxes. Otherwise, there would be no room for gear. I'd say to each is own. If someone wants to build an "overland" vehicle, good for them. You are free to do what you want in the United States.
@romeored38892 ай бұрын
Couldn’t have said it better myself, thank you.
@johnlilley85252 ай бұрын
I agree, I have a rack out of necessity and will definitely need a secure storage box with family of 4, a 70 pound dog and inlaws/friends here and there but I think he's making the point to make one stop for a sec and actually think about what's really needed. Most of the losers I see around here in LA have a tent, boxes, lifts, gas cans, water cans, huge tires on a pristine clean truck. Makes me laugh my ass off. Sure, you can do whatever you want and it may support small business in the USA which I like (like Sherpa) but if it makes even a small percentage stop and think first... wait I do not need this shit... that's a win.
@Fernando-t8g2 ай бұрын
All I'm hearing is excuses to spend and waste money. Made in America? And? Who cares?
@romeored38892 ай бұрын
@@Fernando-t8g Believe it or not there are some people that like support their country. I hope you can wrap your head around this.
@PittiesAndMore2 ай бұрын
@@Fernando-t8g It's not your money. Why do you care? 🤷🏽♂️🙄😆
@andrevukovic356828 күн бұрын
I know a guy who traded in his 2023 CX5 turbo, went out and bought an overpriced 2024 4runner pro. And he paid almost 65k just to look cool. He will have 935 dollar car payments for 84 months. The dealership ripped him off, they gave his mazda lower than the retail value price and he still traded in his car because the 4runner pro was the last brand new one they had. $835X84. He is going to end up paying over 85k for stupid 4runner. Some people are braindead.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD28 күн бұрын
@@andrevukovic3568 But he's a "Pro" now! 😆 🤣
@JTJ0812 ай бұрын
Great video. I bought a 2018 GX460 last year. I started looking at lifts, full roof racks, spare tire swings, etc. Thankfully I never moved forward with any of the mods that I thought I needed. I realized that as much as I wish I was some overlander hitting the deep wilderness every weekend, the reality is my vehicle will spend most of its life on the pavement. Since my primary goal was to have a vehicle for beach driving and car camping, I just upgraded the stock HW tires to 275/65/18 Toyo Open Country on the stock wheels. Did the zip tie method and have no rubbing. I went with Inno aero crossbars on the stock rails, because the only purpose for my roof rack is to carry kayaks. I do plan to get some rock sliders, mainly because I hate the stock side steps. But the vehicle is more than capable for my needs, even when stock. Also, I started watching random 4x4 videos from Australia and thought it was funny that most of these guys have very plain looking, lightly modded 4x4s and they're so known for their off road culture. If they can manage without the crazy "rigs" I see all over KZbin, I certainly can!
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
even if you were going into the "deep wilderness" you need less than you think... watch the yt videos of what they do with Toyotas in Africa 😆.... you'll love it 😀
@vegasstang12 ай бұрын
Willys Overland was around 60 years ago! I do agree with most of what you said. I have a mild inch and a half Dobinsons lift on my 19 GX. Mainly for the increased payload when towing our Casita RV trailer. I also mounted 17 inch wheels from a 2008 GX so I could put 70 series tires on it. They are about an inch taller than stock and ride soooo much better than the low profile 60 series tires. With that combo I dont need to cut up the front bumper! The traction boards can be handy in sand. And of course a decent shovel. I added a rack as well to mainly mount a nice 270 degree awning. That piece of kit is awesome for desert shade and its super easy to set up and put away. I guess it depends on what you are doing with your rig whether you need any of this or not. I can also appreciate popping up a roof tent in 20 seconds vs messing around with a ground tent. I also have friends here in New Mexico that will go on 1 and 2 week long excursions living out of their trucks. Having a bed in the truck, fridge, water etc makes it more enjoyable. Do you NEED it, No, but if you have the money who am I to tell someone how to enjoy their money? By the way, I'm 57 and retired and can do anything I want.
@Jay-me7gw2 ай бұрын
I also had a Prinsu roof rack on my GX and quite liked it. Its really helpful when you are toting around a whole family and dogs and paddle boards and kayaks and whatever other crap you use to recreate. The GX is not a big vehicle when you are a family of 4.
@4x4overlandadventures55Ай бұрын
As one of the people that does long range, multi-state/country journeys, I fully agree with the overall theme here. People very often ask me how to get started and what mods to make. I tell them this: Get basic safety and recovery gear, then add whatever camping gear you have plus fuel. Burn fuel. Lots and lots of fuel. Don't every buy anything or make a modification to a vehicle unless it solves a specific problem that you know you have and annoys you to the point where it is taking away from the experience. The rest takes care of itself. That said, the term overland came into the commercial automotive world in 1908. Overland Motors > Willys Overland >GPW/MB>JEEP. I've been doing this all my life and we never called it "car camping". It was called Jeeping. Even if you drove a Bronco or a Scout. It was Jeeping. Car Camping might sound more inclusive or whatever, but that has only been a term for about the same amount of time as the "Overland Industrial Complex" has been around. Also, trails don't give themselves diamonds. That's just stupid. Using the same rating scale, I've seen trails that are blue squares that would eat your soccer-mobile for lunch AND double blacks diamonds that look like the mall parking lot. The "look" you refer to mimics those of us that embark on long distance, vehicle based adventure travel. We don't care about "trails" and have to be ready for anything from taking a business meeting in the parking lot of In-n-Out to accidentally turning onto an 8' shelf road with a 7'6" wide rig pulling a trailer (I did that last week). All of that typed, I also can't stand all of the crap people have hanging off the side of their vehicles. I carry some big stuff at all times. . .chain saw, ax, shovel, air compressor, recovery kit and on and on. . .but you can't see any of it from the outside. Looks like a stock Jeep with a small lift and slightly larger tires. Tires that have driven in 2 oceans, the gulf of Mexico and the Sea of Cortez, but the guy at the grocery store doesn't need to know that.
@roycenruizАй бұрын
I agree with most of what you say except, I have a question. How many kids or pets do you bring with you? With 5 of us in the vehicle I couldn’t imagine fitting everything inside the vehicle.
@4x4overlandadventures55Ай бұрын
@roycenruiz currently 1 pet and one wife. zero kids. Previously, 2 kids, 1 pet, 1 wife. All in a CJ7.
@markely75872 ай бұрын
Fun video! I’ve been off-roading my entire life. Started with my Dad and his old Blazer. Small lift, 35” tires which were huge for the time. He had a 50 quart Coleman ice chest that held food, beer, soda for us. He had a 5 gallon water jug, and he made a “Boy Scout Patrol Box” that held our kitchen supplies. 2 sleeping bags, tent, ground pad, two duffel bag, couple shotguns for upland hunting. It all fit inside the Blazer. We went everywhere in the desert with that thing. When I built my off road rig, it had a small lift, off road tires and if it didn’t fit in the bed of my truck and be covered by a Tonneau Cover it didn’t come along. I don’t like all that crap hanging off my rig. I’d be to concerned about people stealing stuff off of it to relax.
@williamweaver32442 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for making this excellent video. I’ve been obsessing over mods for my Forester Wilderness going back and forth tallying up different gear and set ups. You really helped re-center my thought process on all of it. This is a must see video and it’s done impeccably well. I can’t overstate it’s value and quality of content.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
@williamweaver3244 We've stock seen subarus on many of the moderate trails out here... they go there no problem! Check it out: GX460 On Blue Square ▣ Trails [MODERATE DIFFICULTY]: kzbin.info/aero/PL8tJPBoyhNSLjahVamWk1P2Q9W2WR71-q
@brettaugustinowicz36012 ай бұрын
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD glad to see other people are noticing the subaru capability. I take my stock 2011 forester 5spd on trails and the looks I get from truck bros are out of this world
@manwithnoname7342 ай бұрын
I have a 2.5" lift on my tacoma with 32" tires and that's it. But thank you for this video, I've been saying all this stuff for years. Just pitch a tent and cook over a fire like a man.
@RailRover6523 күн бұрын
This is so relevant AND funny, great video, especially the "roof top tent Snoopy" and sticking an Applebee's in the back that just had me ROFL! That said, this has also generated a LOT of very insightful comments from folks that are just as interesting to read and cause you to think about how this absolutely is not a closed-off hobby only for folks with way too much money to spend on a "looks mobile". Props too for the outro rock cover of the "Unsolved Mysteries" theme!
@coloradomallcrawlers2 ай бұрын
I’m finding these overlanding is a scam vids to be perplexing. I’m not even an overlander (instead, nearly 25 years as an offroader), I wheel stock Jeeps, and I’m in $113 ground tent… but I know the USA has some of the absolute BEST true overlanding routes in the world. My definition of overlanding is self sufficient multiday offroad camping. To do that, you need some gear (I do not push any gear on my channel).
@oldakela6834Ай бұрын
I off road camped for most of my life with my main gear being a camp cot, sleeping bag and Coleman cooler. When overlanding became a word I suddenly had a coworker go out and buy a brand new jeep and spend thousands tricking it out. I kept asking him every Monday if he took it anywhere. He literally took it out one time in the four years I worked with him, and it was 2N02 back road to big bear (since I see you must live nearby). Meanwhile I was going out at least once a month way out in BFE in the deserts and mountains in my mostly stock FJ cruiser which has been called a hoopty because it has dings and such, you know, signs of use. 😂
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@oldakela6834 ya spot on... same crap happened in the 80s when the yuppies discovered moutain biking... went out and bought expensive bikes, helmets, gear, racing regalia, then proceeded to go out once then park it in the garage lol 😆 love 2N02 ❤️
@bradrichardson80622 ай бұрын
You forgot dumb looking snorkel
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
@@bradrichardson8062 zomg!!! good catch!! 😆 🤣 😂
@Adventure_Rig2 ай бұрын
@bradrichardson8062 gained 2 mpg when I added my snorkel and my air filter is much cleaner after a desert run...
@christianvienneau66782 ай бұрын
I find it interesting you say all this and then drive a Lexus ? I’d think you would bought a $30,0000 Les costing 4 runner that’s even more capable ? Everything you said applies to Lexus gx verses a 4 runner . Or will you deny this fact ? That said I agree that 50 percent people who spend on lots the glamp set don’t use it .
@freedomseeds47132 ай бұрын
@Adventure_Rig most people don't understand that the snorkel was originally designed to move your intake up high where dust is less dense and you can add a pre-filter.
@shuster21862 ай бұрын
@@christianvienneau6678 that GX probably cost less than a 4runner in the same varient. Mine did.
@robertcameron386325 күн бұрын
L O L the best content I’ve seen on KZbin today!
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD25 күн бұрын
@@robertcameron3863 lol 😆 thanks for your support ✌️ ❤️
@johnmartin2079Ай бұрын
When you drive a unimog from morocco to Namibia, with a satellite phone and secret compartments to hide weapons for your own personal protection you might be overlanding
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@@johnmartin2079 this!! ❤️
@ShadOband9 күн бұрын
That's some hardcore Robert Stack channel music to accompany this hardcore logical message... nice vid!
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD9 күн бұрын
@@ShadOband 🙏 ❤️ 🙇♂️
@bflat6022 ай бұрын
!I so love this. I've been taking my Prius into insane places for years. Finally got a Subaru Wilderness and found I do the same stuff, just faster. Don't need any of it. Thanks
@johnganshow55362 ай бұрын
Funny but true. I've got a lifted Wrangler with larger A/T tires, but that's it. If I want to sleep in the boonies I fold the back seat down and a sleeping pad/sleeping bag fits just fine in the back...
@Smarterthanyou-mthrfkrАй бұрын
I went to panama and back in a 1990 suburban 4x4, no winch, no crap, couple 5 gallon jerry cans of oil for oil changes etc, tempurpedic mattress .3 years on the road all through central america, only needed 4x4 six times. Thats it.
@paulwiest816728 күн бұрын
Thank you. This video was humbling. I have a 4x4 and a few years back I bought a rooftop tent. I’ve fallen into the trap of thinking I need so much more gear (front and rear lockers, air compressor, fridge, solar, heated water tank, diesel heater, a/c unit, full size spare, recovery boards, steel bumper with winch and the list goes on) that I haven’t even taken my family to go on a trip I ages. Granted: the first time I really pushed my vehicle and into uncharted territory I instantly got stuck and had to wait hours for recovery, so that did scar me a bit. But your video has given me the courage to find some easy trails and get back out there to do what really matters, and detach from our cushy everyday and make memories with my family.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD27 күн бұрын
@paulwiest8167 Thank you for your honesty... you truly right... some may get triggered by the truth, but the fact is the "look of freedom adventure" is the primary overlanding-drug. We've lived offroad in the Mojave for 13 years now, and nobody has the regalia hanging off the sides... obe heard similar anecdotes from people who are hermits in Alaska who also watch the overglampers pass through: GX460 Recovers Other Vehicles OFF-ROAD [and sometimes gets stuck]: kzbin.info/aero/PL8tJPBoyhNSK-iptuf5fEZsKhgZ3fbZnh
@dixonbuttes6564Ай бұрын
Nailed it!!! Overlanding is poserlanding!!! Every word is right on. Preach! 👍👍
@3rddegree5327 күн бұрын
You want to see a poser? Check their paint if there is any pinstripes!😂
@KartsHuseonica24 күн бұрын
You made me think about a few friends of mine who think like you do. Excellent video.
@ruck-a-tronАй бұрын
It reminds me of the people who drive the huge trucks that never tow or carry anything.
@MeJonTheDonАй бұрын
Cant speak for everyone, but I would like the room, handling and safety aspects of a big truck. It seems the people that complain the most are those that just can't afford it and want to bring others down. In fact, when I see a small parking spot, I look at the developers as cheap idiots who don't see what people want: bigger vehicles. THE PEOPLE HAVE SPOKEN
@NormanDimmickАй бұрын
In my area, that venn diagram is a circle. It's much easier to cram your bed full of bolted in overlanding gear and sacrifice payload capacity with offroad suspension and thousands of crap on your roof racks if you never actually tow or haul anything with your truck. In fairness, being a dedicated offroader is a totally valid use case for a truck, and one that actually sees dirt regularly is a totally different beast a pavement princess, but it's usually pretty apparent when something is just for looks and the fantasy of adventure rather than a well thought out offroading setup built according to needs.
@gcarson19Ай бұрын
@@MeJonTheDon You mean can't afford the BS usurious mortgage payments? Anybody who plays the "I'm rich, you're poor " card is the WORST kind of poser...
@MeJonTheDonАй бұрын
@gcarson19 i didn't say I could afford it nor do I have one, but for those that can good for them, they bought something they want. Too many nosey people worrying about what others want to spend their money on, rather than focusing on themselves. Further, most people didn't just buy a vehicle recently, they bought their vehicle when things were more affordable. The average price of new vehicles when you take out the bulk discounted fleet sales is around the mid $50k range, so basically everyone buying now is in that boat, not just truck owners. Pickups historically and to this day are also better priced than most similar sized SUVs, so provide a good value for people on a relative basis
@galenztwo28 күн бұрын
@@MeJonTheDon You sound like the very person who this video is targeting
@jordanherrmann958419 күн бұрын
This was really funny! I understand and respect that we all have different experiences in this life that shape our views and influence our choices but one thing’s for sure there’s no other feeling like when you’re way out there I mean way way back in the high country and you realize you’re probably the only person for miles and miles and then you turn a corner and there’s some dude in a 1995 Toyota Camry just smiling and waving as he passes by. That humbles you real quick. I always know that no matter how far I go or how loaded out or capable my rig is that there’s a dude in a Camry waiting for me at the end of the line and a guy on a KLR650 riding circles around us.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD19 күн бұрын
@@jordanherrmann9584 happens all the time: kzbin.infoUtkfUnkFVW4?feature=share
@mftwomey2 ай бұрын
Truth hurts!!! Wrangler owner with 2"spacer lift and 33" tires. That's the extent - which gets me out into Death Valley and parts beyond. I am an old style camper with a single burner Coleman stove, ice chest, and ground tent. Works wonderful for me and so very simple to set up and take care of. "Jeep'n It Simple" is my motto. Looking forward to more videos from you.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
@mftwomey Wranglers are literally the most capable vehicle stock... we'd have one if it wasn't for the whole Chrysler reliability thing (lolz😆 ). But those angles can't be beat.... the original Landcruiser looked just like a Wrangler... as you know 33s a jeep will do anything 😃 ❤️ ✌️
@RobsNeighborАй бұрын
As a long time mechanic your intro has me forever! Love IT! So much Truth!
@TheOffroadCamper28 күн бұрын
Drive what you got enjoy the adventure, love the channel, buddy. I’m subscribing.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD27 күн бұрын
@@TheOffroadCamper thank you for your sincere and happy support ❤️ 💕 🙏 🇺🇸 🙇♂️
@disinter3181Ай бұрын
From the perspective of being anti-consumerism, this video is spot on and I love it. Having travelled all over the third world and been offroading in four gear Kei vans with 14" wheels, I will stick to the idea that most Americans embrace overkill to a fault, vastly underestimate the ability of a pretty standard 4x4, and would be better off focusing on driver skill than blowing money on crazy electronic systems and gear. Case in point - there are numerous Reddit threads I stumbled upon when researching the purchase of my SR5 Tacoma where a poster would ask if a basic SR5 with low range would even be capable enough to tackle simple trails. It's wild because I remember when trucks didn't come with any modes, and a rear locker was reserved for top of the line offroad models - now some people act like it's something just good enough to get by. Funny thing is the trails haven't changed... we got fatter, our trucks got more bloated and expensive, and our perspectives have shifted as we have fallen victim to a bunch of stupid marketing.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@disinter3181 You're spot on. As you said, it's all an excuse to buy things, show off, and hide a lack of basic 4x4 skills. The bizarre part is how ostentatious it is... all the nonsense needs to be on display outside of the vehicle... we are in the Mojave offroad and the locals get around in 2wd cars/trucks/priuses etc... offroading kinda got hijacked like moutain biking got hijacked by the yuppies in the 1980s with their "gear".. waterbottles, neon helmets, knee pads, racing tights complete with fake sponsor logos 😆 etc... and they'd take the bike out to the same bunny trail as little kids with used single-speed Huffys were on..
@jasonkelley3143Ай бұрын
I love it. Someone finally said it.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@@jasonkelley3143 😆 🤣 😂 it had to be said 😆 thanks for your support ❤️ ✌️ 🇺🇸
@ajitpalsinghjudge80192 ай бұрын
Thank you for keeping it simple, real & being brutally honest!
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
🙏 ❤️ thank you for your continued support of the channel 🙏 😀
@rogerd94052 ай бұрын
Nailed it. I've often wondered what the infatuation with incorporating the living quarters to the vehicle is all about. Like you said, it's all about a look and trying to portray a sense of adventure.
@chrischecksitoutАй бұрын
In the mid 90’s I lived in Phoenix and went “overlanding” all the time in my ‘93 Ford Ranger regular cab 2 wheel drive long bed and all I had was BFGoodrich all terrains. Did just fine
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@NatureConnect-1 we did it the 90s in one of those old box-Cherokees... we didn't have a name for it either.. we just called it doin nonsense and partying in the woods while camping 😆... nothing was hanging off the jeep
@MajorWeakness28 күн бұрын
@@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD i still have an old box cherokee xj. Camping it it often across the country. 100% stock except a solar panel on roof and refrigerator inside
@HungNguyen-jq2lxАй бұрын
Bro woke up and chose violent, I LOVE IT!!!
@PB-jy2we2 сағат бұрын
Or in other words… camping isn’t about what you take with you, it’s about what you leave behind.
@jimblair64582 ай бұрын
You make some good points. I'll play devil's advocate for a minute and offer my opinion. 1. The outside tire carrier? A: Bigger tires will not fit in the factory under body tire carrier. 2. The "2 gallon" gas can is useless because that is not enough gas to get anywhere. A: the cans are usually 5 gallons. even off roading, I can go at least 40-50 miles on 5 gallons. 3. Hanging stuff on outside of your rig looks silly. A: You don't want dirty shovels, gas cans, muddy tires, hi-lift jack, stuck strips, etc in the back of your SUV. I keep my food and spare clothing, extra shoes, rain gear etc inside the back. 4. People are debt slaves to their "rig." A: If it makes people feel better about working the grind, if they do it with the dream of the call of the wild on the week end, more power to them. Both of my vehicles are paid for. They are older models, but they are well maintained.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
@jimblair6458 weeelll... as stated in the video _most_ overglampers will stay on easy to moderate trails, therefore: 1. larger tires are not need (unless for "looks") 2. you will not run out of gas (unless for "looks") 3. your recovery gear will fit neatly, cleanly and safely inside the vehicle (unless for "looks") Now, naturally anyone has a right to do whatever they want with their vehicle for whatever reason they want: 4. is not passing judgement, it's explaining the "for looks" logic so those who want to car camp don't feel the "look" is an objective requirement to do so😉✌️
@isobot9376Ай бұрын
@@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD I'm more of a softroader so I self identify as a cosplayer when it comes to overlanding, but have gotten myself into some tricky situations were my big tires and slight lift saved my ass. My gear will not fit inside with kids and dog, yes I could get a bigger vehicle but why if I can strap it to the roof? I do take it off when not camping, otherwise my gas milage would suffer and theft is a bigger problem. I hate to tell you what works for you just might, wait for it- are you ready? might not work for everyone, wow, what a concept! I know your mind must be blown. I totally agree that you need minimal gear to go on a adventure and over landing gear is getting ridiculous but there can be a need outside of your narrow scope. I know you are fanning the flames for the engagement, so congrats but you might get more long term subscribers if you were entertaining, which you are, hell that was funny, but after saying something that is a gross generalization to make a point (and humorous) you might try and walk it back a bit to be more factual. Everyone wins!
@AvalonEndures16 күн бұрын
Initially I thought this was going to be a satirical video of someone just talking shit, but honestly everything that you said was on point! I like how you explained it's what you do that matters and that you don't need a lot in order to go out and have adventures. I've been living out of my front wheel drive Ford Explorer since 2023 and I've been having more adventures and going to more places in that vehicle then many of my friends who own four-wheel drive beasts.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD16 күн бұрын
@AvalonEndures local Honda Civic offroads out here too: kzbin.infoUtkfUnkFVW4?feature=share
@iwazaru81012 ай бұрын
The timing of this video couldn't be better. Just a few hours ago, a dude got out of his 3rd Gen Tacoma TRD Pro riding on KO2s, complete with bright orange traction boards and shovel mounted on a spiffy black bed rack. After he went inside the store, I checked out his truck's rocker panels and lower rear bumper. Not a scratch. Bottom of the front bumper? Mint (OK, may be a couple of small rock chips). TRD skid plate? I could almost see my reflection. Traction boards? Must have been delivered by Amazon this morning.
@Jay-me7gw2 ай бұрын
@@iwazaru8101 I’m sure he took off all the parts that make the TRD Pro unique and replaced them with aftermarket parts that could bolt on any Tacoma?
@iskdude99222 ай бұрын
Maybe he just bought them... traction boards are a good idea still.
@Jay-me7gw2 ай бұрын
@@iskdude9922 I do agree about that. I use my Traction boards a lot. I even carry them in my Chevy Bolt in the winter and have used them to get myself and other out of deep snow
@iskdude99222 ай бұрын
@@Jay-me7gw i got stuck on the beach once in my elantra. I asked some redneck in a big ass truck to help but he said he would damage my car. Which is just b.s. prob. He didnt want to help because im a minority prob. But if it wasnt for the carpet in my car id have never gotten out lol
@iwazaru81012 ай бұрын
@@Jay-me7gw I never said traction boards are not useful. The point was either his Taco was an overlanding expo "show truck" or the guy was a huge poser.
@bajalife4everАй бұрын
I just subscribed to this channel because the video is so true.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@@bajalife4ever thank you! We appreciate your sincere support 🙏 🙌 ❤️
@mr.mctiktok2 ай бұрын
I know it’s technically not a 4x4 but I take my stock Subaru Forester Wilderness and a tent w/ a little Coleman grill to places that overland built 4Runners go. The drivers are definitely shocked 😂
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
@mr.mctiktok Subarus are all over the trails out here. YT proves their abilities 😃 ❤️ again... Can't buy skill... 😉 enjoy your Subaru... on YT there's tons of videos of AWD cars going down most overglamping trails just dandy and such
@stevezodiac5752 ай бұрын
G'day from Western Australia. Awesome video! Okay, I admit I do have a few modifications for my 150 Prado 2.8 Diesel, but that doesn't stop me from whole heartedly agreeing with your philosophy in this video. So many great words of wisdom here! I agree - stronger tyres (tires) and under vehicle protection (as insurance) is all you need for a GX 460 / 150 Prado. These machines are so capable they will look after you off road - the traction control (once you understand how it works) is superb! Western Australia is a vast space - 100 years ago people managed to overland in 1920s vehicles with 1920s technology - 100 years later, with our vehicles, we have more than we need/know how to use already!!
@SemperFortisCorpsman2 ай бұрын
YES!!!! You are so right! None of that gear is necessary, period! Nonetheless, some of us buy "American" Jeeps (I have a 2 doors Sport S without all the bells and whistles as a Rubicon) as a hobby where purchasing all that unnecessary gear is just for the looks. I personally see some of that gear as a comfort thing, not a need! No one needs air conditioners; but we all have them! I don't need a RTT; but I have it just because I like the look and the comfort. My wife and I enjoy tailgating or going for a one-day camping trip. We open our 270 awning, then the refrigerator, a couple of chairs and enjoy the view under the shade while cooking on an Amazon's Coleman little stove--- in anywhere shade! It is the looks, for sure; and also for our comfort. AGAIN..... yes, the overlanding world is phony and I agree 100% with everything said in the video.
@andrewsiff2 ай бұрын
Duuude! Thanks for this! I grew up car camping on family vacations in he 60’s. My first “overlanding” was in the early 70’s in a 1957 Karmann Ghia. That car went everywhere. Moved up to a 69 Volvo wagon, went everywhere with more stuff. Moved through Yukons and Suburbans, now a 2011 grand Cherokee that actually does have a 1.5 inch lift, cuz I needed a new front strut. I love you! Car camping for the win!
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
@@andrewsiff I love you too! 😍 ❤️ thanks for subscribing!!
@PaulWall782 ай бұрын
100 percent agreed. what happened to just, "offroading, wheeling..." the word, "overlanding" lol new gen bs
@TsavoTouring2 ай бұрын
@@PaulWall78 people saw photos of overland travel (international - Africa, South America, etc) and the most interesting ones were of overlanders driving in dirt in more remote locations. So people automatically assumed that overlanding was the driving in dirt part and not the travel part. Which lead us to the current state of affairs where most people (self proclaimed overlanders) in the US / Canada place the focus on modifying the vehicle for “wheeling” and occasional camping trips instead of actual travel. It’s an honest mistake that’s gone overboard.
@westcoastplinkin65592 ай бұрын
@@TsavoTouring I just dont' see why people care so much though. Who really cares about what other people do with their vehicles?
@TsavoTouring2 ай бұрын
@@westcoastplinkin6559 I don’t think many people do care. And I’d say that most people interested in overlanding especially in the US share the same definition which is (in my opinion) overly vague and difficult to nail down for the purpose of nearly any discussion (like in this video). Just for example, off the top of my head, if I say the best overland tire size is one that’s widely available in developing countries and doesn’t break any laws in places like Australia… most other would think I’m crazy because 37s and 35s and 33s are widely available in the United States and provide benefits for more recreational off-road applications. Or if I’m taking about an overland tent and my perspective is that a 3000-4000 Alu Cab / Eezi awn is “the best” because they’ll have hardly any problems over the course of a 9 month trip around Southern Africa… a “American Overlander” could be steered wrong following my advice- especially if they out it on a credit card and use it three times a year. At the end of the day it’s not a big deal but it is nice to have a shared definition or point of veiw (even if it’s not exact)… I guess I feel like that’s the point of words and language. With all that said… there are so few international North American overlanders that the loose definition used in this video will certainly remain the predominant one for years to come.
@zipticАй бұрын
2 min in and can't stop laughing! This is one of the funniest things I've seen all year. 😂
@JohannLeRoux-d2nАй бұрын
It all depends where you intent to travel to. Overlanding in remote Africa and Australia is very different to overlanding in others parts of the world. Overlanding is a type of adventure travel that involves exploring remote areas, often in a 4x4 vehicle, where the journey is just as important as the destination. It's about immersing oneself in nature, cultures, and experiences, typically in rugged or hard-to-reach territories. For that you you will need to be prepared and you will need some gear. Overlanding often involves: 1. Off-grid travel: Venturing into areas with limited infrastructure. 2. Self-reliance: Carrying gear, supplies, and tools for camping, cooking, and vehicle maintenance. 3. Flexibility: Embracing spontaneity and adapting to changing circumstances. 4. Cultural immersion: Engaging with local communities and learning about their customs. 5. Outdoor activities: Hiking, camping, wildlife viewing, and other nature-based pursuits. Overlanders may travel solo, in groups, or with guided expeditions, covering vast distances or focusing on specific regions. Popular overlanding destinations include Africa, Asia, the Americas, and Australia. Key aspects of overlanding include: 1. Vehicle preparation: Modifying and equipping vehicles for off-grid travel. 2. Route planning: Researching and mapping routes, considering terrain, weather, and local regulations. 3. Camping and cooking: Setting up temporary camps and preparing meals in the wilderness. 4. Navigation: Using maps, GPS, and compasses to stay on course. 5. Safety: Managing risk, emergency preparedness, and teamwork. Overlanding inspires personal growth, fosters connections with nature and cultures, and creates lifelong memories.
@flyyinryanАй бұрын
"If you wanna sleep like Snoopy" HAA..!!! Those roof top tents are such an enormous joke in my opinion. I took my stock Renegade with commuter tires up to an alpine lake in the Sierra Nevada's and when we got to the top all the "overlanding rigs" with giant tires were looking at us like we were crazy for bringing it up the trail. When your experience is worth more than the crap hanging off the sides, the trip seems more enjoyable... Great video!
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@flyyinryan lolz so true, the Jeep Caravan in this video was on 2N17X (black-diamond) they were NOT happy to see a stock-height Lexus on that trail 😆 they waived us to go past them 😀 ...as you said, it's how you drive, not what you drive ✌️
@hangarsacto2 ай бұрын
This is such truth!! I live in Los Angeles and have noticed tons of these vehicles popping up. And I’m like, what are all these crazy vehicles looking like this now, like snorkels on new cars?! Like you’re really forging rivers in your new $90k Land Rover?!
@houseoflibraАй бұрын
Bahaha I love how jaded you are, but everything you say is 100% true. I started finding it so amusing seeing people on their daily commute with their "rig". I'm not going to lie, I started going down the overlanding rabbit hole pre-pandemic, but then I realized it's kind of embarrassing to show off a vehicle like that and didn't bother.
@Ufukkkk29 күн бұрын
My coworker has all kinds of expensive camping gear on his 4runner and he never goes anywhere with it. Large falken all terrain tires, stupid ladder in the back, 1k dollar roof rack ect ect. His truck is always spotless. So pathetic.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD29 күн бұрын
yep... same crap in the 80s with mountain bikes.... they had all the $3k bikes and never hit the trails... ever... basically it's one sad cry for help ❤️ ✌️
@TheKingfish2118 күн бұрын
Finally someone made a video of what most people that actually camp regularly think! 😆
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD18 күн бұрын
@@TheKingfish21 🙇♂️ ❤️ ✌️
@CALJAMRLasVegas2 ай бұрын
You are absolutely right.....but it is really fun to buy things and install them yourself. Same goes for my Harley, Bronco, mountain bike etc. I like when people remove all of those items to sell their truck and then buy them at a huge discount :)
@Kflash3782Ай бұрын
You are so right. We over think everything. I started out overlanding / camping in a 1979 Honda CVCC wagon with front wheel drive and took countless trips up the side of slippery granite laced mountains in the Poconos. Now I’m driving a newer capable 4x4, and I am constantly fighting the urge to buy a winch and tons of other gear just to “feel” confident doing trails half as serious as I attempted in the Honda.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@Kflash3782 amen... in reality a shovel, rope, and your factory spiral jack will get you and others unstuck 99% of the actual time: GX460 Recovers Other Vehicles OFF-ROAD [and sometimes gets stuck]: kzbin.info/aero/PL8tJPBoyhNSK-iptuf5fEZsKhgZ3fbZnh
@TheRockasaki2 ай бұрын
It's kinda sad seeing these rigged-out spotless "Emotional Support Vehicles" at rush hour headed to their goat pens (cubicles).
@westcoastplinkin65592 ай бұрын
I think that just speaks for their versatility. And off road rig can both be a commuter and an off road rig. But a commuter can only be a commuter.
@Elcognito-o8n2 ай бұрын
Cry about it
@isobot9376Ай бұрын
What's wrong with cosplaying adventure? hmm, I could tell you what is wrong with gate keeping...
@wildernessfieldjournal82112 ай бұрын
I am sooo with you on this point buddy! I'm a big proponent that you don't need a roof top tent or max Trax on the outside of your rig to be an overlander. I have a stock Jeep Gladiator with a truck cap and I fill it up with camping gear and go on road trips, hit a few trails and get out camping. I call that overlanding because I live out of the truck and travel over the land. There are certainly a lot of posers deep in dept out there. "It's not what you drive, it's what you do" what a great quote! Thanks for the PSA announcement.
@fouUili6842 ай бұрын
I agree bro, it’s just showing how much money they can give away to those companies either going into more debt or whatever. Also, those “overlanders” are all over payload capacity which many people overlook. Everything you add to the vehicle takes away from payload including passengers, modifications, gear, etc.
@kurtbeck58092 ай бұрын
And fuel mileage is destroyed 😊
@845ToastT2 ай бұрын
It's true, putting a canopy, 2 dogs, a couple gas cans, 2 passengers, and a winch on a Tacoma puts you over payload. That's before you put any camping gear in lmao
@StanlyTPT2 ай бұрын
Mr GX, That was a masterpiece of honesty & directness... and hilarious. Your use of the word "bullocks" was priceless... If you're interested in saying it like a proper Irish ginger (like me), then it is spelled & pronounced "bollix". Keep doing what your doing, it's awesome... Cheers
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
@StanlyTPT Thank you for your happy comment and words of support ❤️. Thank you for the correct pronunciation... 😃✌️
@tacoteng20952 ай бұрын
Seems to be a wave of "overlanding is a scam" videos going around from all the youtube channels. Whats the background on this?
@DrDangers2 ай бұрын
Everyone needs to be superior. I've been wheeling my 470 stock, but for sure putting some mods on it for functionality and style. Having a cool car has been appealing forever... Feels like people are making it out to be such a novel thing because it's an off road vehicle and not a sports car. Meh.
@TsavoTouring2 ай бұрын
@@tacoteng2095 I think people are beginning to realize that the current widely accepted definition of “overlanding” in the US doesn’t really make sense. If you look at it from the international travel perspective instead of 4x4 + camping it’s easier to sort out. If you’re driving through the Amazon for two months extra fuel, a winch, recovery boards, a fridge, and better tires make a lot of sense. If you’re just driving gravel roads to camp next to a lake or taking a weekend trip out to anza borrego / Mojave trail it becomes harder to actually justify… unless you’re just copying what you’ve seen others do. I think it’s mostly a combination of following a trend and not taking the time to figure out what the term means / where it came from.
@tacoteng20952 ай бұрын
@@TsavoTouring I understand all that but in the past month, over a third of the channels I follow are making videos with the same topic. Where is this trending from? This whole "overlanding" thing has been called out as car camping for at least a couple years now.
@TsavoTouring2 ай бұрын
@@tacoteng2095 I’d say it’s effective clickbait… and trend chasing. One person probably made a video trying to be controversial. The video did well. Now all of the other “overland” channels are following suit.
@T4Rgarage2 ай бұрын
I’ve seen multiple videos now with an identical thumbnails covering the same topic. One a week probably for the last 3 months
@olliechristopher467Ай бұрын
I'm with you 100%!! I go even one step further back. I have a 05 GMC Sierra 2WD. My modifications are a TruTrack diff, upgraded electrical system, soft top and I do have cheap traction boards just in case. Other than that I'm good with my small camp kit with a JetBoil and easy to make food. This overloading sensation is unbelievable. I wonder if these people are considering the weight of these vehicles and the stress on the suspension and chassis.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@@olliechristopher467 spot on! Someone in 2wd is always at the end of a black-diamond trail... skills are skills... we'll be talking about overloaded overlanders soon, so be sure to subscribe 😉 ❤️
@elijahcavin24082 ай бұрын
Been "overlanding" in an old bone stock 4x4 trooper, a 4x4 dually truck, and awd suv. So many good memories and the best were probably in the trooper. Body on frame and didn't care about rubbing against stuff or framing out on rocks. Great size and capability. Awd suv is better for longer cross country trips. I used the same gear in every vehicle, just basic camping gear.
@prairieschooner259912 күн бұрын
Listening to that Lexus banging along was as hilarious as it was telling about the unnecessary over geared state of car camping. Great video. 👍
@bavardage2 ай бұрын
Not to mention how all these 'accessories' like lift kits, larger tires, wheel spacers, roof tents, winches, etc. might adversely affect you, your vehicle, or others (e.g., driveline angles, U-joints, wheel bearings, CV joints, weight, fuel economy, handling, ABS, emergency manoeuvres and potential accident aftermath, calibrated detection sensors and accident avoidance, etc.). Thanks for this excellent video pointing out all of these marketing or psychological fallacies for 99.9% of the general population!
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
exactly... the engineering (balance) is thrown of for the sake of image-extremism.... also nearly all common overglamper vehicles are "light duty"... Jeeps, GXs, 4runners, Tacomas... none are actual "duty" trucks meant to carry an actual LOAD... ie all the overlanding plate-steel and Rainforest Cafe in the back... they are grossly overload.
@bavardage2 ай бұрын
Precisely ...the merry-go-round carousel effect ... larger tires; lift kit; tire carrier; 'beefier' suspension, bumpers, axles, differentials, drivetrain; higher capacity alternators (for their fridge, hairdryer, stereo system, whatever) ... 😂 I hope (but do not think) that the vehicle owners and accessory manufactures know of all of the *engineering* implications of their modifications for all the different makes, brands, and models ... "Give the consumer what they want" and companies are only too happy to oblige ...
@Sergiop4x2 ай бұрын
While I agree with what you said.. my truck is being built cause I'm bored... It's fun to build.. for me at least... Every trip I strive to take less 🫡
@RoyFeintuch2 ай бұрын
I'm with you brother - builders like to build stuff
@shaunfrey78002 ай бұрын
I find it funny how concerned everyone is with the spending habits of others.
@echobenav8Ай бұрын
This is hilarious! So very true, thanks for making! For every scout camping trip I took with my boys, a Sienna was more than capable for all the fire roads that I was warned as "off-road". And way more comfortable than all the "rigs" that would show up from lifted full size pickups to overbuilt mall crawlers.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@@echobenav8 lolz ... check out our Sienna offroad: kzbin.info/www/bejne/ZpCpipp4mtKlkNk
@vnegron32 ай бұрын
As an off road driving trainer & enthusiast, thank you for making this video. 100% spot-on! 😉👌👏🙌
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROAD2 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it! 😉 ❤️
@Mursedave10 күн бұрын
I love this guys sarcasm and humor!
@zsuzsuspetals2 ай бұрын
Great video. The thing is there is nothing wrong with having gadgets and having a cool looking vehicle. Half the things we have in our life is stuff we don't need. The issue is as you said, when the owners of all this gear tells others that you need this in order to be a "true overlander' and how many people miss out on adventures because they think they can't afford it. If you have a car you can afford to be an overlander/car camper. It's also a problem when the guy with 100k in gear belittles the people who don't have / want/ can't afford it.
@martinfoster5163Ай бұрын
I agree with most of your points. I live and drive off-road in the mountains of Mongolia. My 4WD is pretty stock. It's a Ssangyong Musso. The only things I've changed are the lights - the stock ones are rubbish and the tires, which are all terrain/all season. I'd say 80% of our driving is off-road. We take a shovel and a tow strap but that's about it. When we go touring across the Gobi desert, we take a backpackers tent and typical all-purpose camping equipment. We might buy mud/snow tires this winter because we got stuck a few times (once in mud, once in snow) with the AT tires in the last 3 years. But it was mainly a problem with the 4WD failing which would normally have got us through.
@LexusGX460-OFF-ROADАй бұрын
@martinfoster5163 thanks for sharing your experiences 🙏 ❤️ we also find the shovel, rope and oem spiral jack to get us out of 99% of stuck situations... thankfully the stock GX460 headlight are excellent... lightbars are overrated 😆