Weekly highlights from Land Rover's Silk Trail 2013
expedition, travelling 17,000 kilometres from Solihull, UK, to
Mumbai, India and taking-in the legendary Silk Road trading route
that first connected Asia with Europe more than 2,000 years ago.
This epic journey is the final validation test for prototypes of
the new Range Rover Hybrid before the model is signed-off for
production.
- Silk Trail 2013 expedition progresses from the hot deserts of
Uzbekistan to the high mountains of Kyrgyzstan
- Three Range Rover Hybrid prototypes demonstrate supreme
all-terrain capabilities on deeply muddy mountain ascents and rocky
cattle trails
- Driving to 3,973 metres above sea level, cars and expedition
team members are tested in preparation for even greater heights
when crossing the Himalayas
- Progress impeded only by punctures, the expedition has now
covered 10,190 kilometres from Solihull –
approximately 6,900 kilometres to go to Mumbai
- Expedition photographs and video on Land Rover media
website
Three Range Rover Hybrid prototypes have progressed from the hot
deserts of Uzbekistan to the high mountains of Kyrgyzstan as the
Silk Trail 2013 expedition is poised to enter China.
The vehicles have blazed a trail in the last week across dusty
desert roads running parallel to the legendary Silk Trail trading
route, held back only by a time-consuming border crossing out of
Uzbekistan, before progressing eastwards through the spectacular
high-altitude mountains of Kyrgyzstan.
The fourth week of the expedition's two-month journey began in
Uzbekistan's capital city Tashkent, for centuries a stopping post
for Silk Road merchants, missionaries and mercenaries. The
expedition then entered Kyrgyzstan, the 11th of the 14 countries on
its route.
Here, the Range Rover Hybrids and their drivers faced the
toughest tests of the expedition so far. Heading into the Fergana
mountain range, the vehicles tackled narrow and rutted mud tracks
in darkness. It was only 19 kilometres to the clearing on top of a
hill where tents would be pitched for the night, but covering that
short distance took several hours. Following heavy rains, the
steeply-inclined roads were so wet and muddy that even the most
capable hybrid four-wheel-drive vehicles in the world had to fight
their way forward yard-by-yard.
The expedition's additional test this week has been high
altitudes. One day the convoy drove into icy winds above the
snowline at 1,760 metres, looking down on a cloud-layer and soaring
eagles. Next day the road climbed higher still, to 3,350 metres,
reaching a vast meadowland plateau. Two days later the expedition
took rocky cattle trails to an altitude of 3,973 metres, where the
team's medical expert checked each individual's heart rate and
blood-oxygen saturation levels, in anticipation of possible
altitude sickness when the convoy later crosses the Himalayas.
Descending from these great heights towards the Kyrgyzstan
capital, Bishkek, the Range Rover Hybrids were often able to travel
on their electric motors only, gliding downhill in near-silence,
the braking for hairpin bends enough to regenerate the battery's
charge.
Moving east from Bishkek, the Silk Trail 2013 expedition will
spend one more night in Kyrgyzstan before crossing the border into
China.
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Editors Note:
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