Itinerary and duration
How far and how long you plan to travel ought to have a major influence on your choice of wheels. The longer you plan to travel and the more variable the climate en route, the more youll appreciate a house on wheels rather than a car you can live out of. But remember that what can enable you to roam far and wide across Latin America and Asia (in the less extreme seasons) may struggle or limit your options in Africa. Even with a roof tent, many travelers who undertake trips of more than a few months in regular 4x4s return in a bigger vehicle, usually because they encountered others doing it this way and saw the clear advantages. Despite Africa being a perennially warm continent, tent camping or crawling around in the back of a car with a few inches of headroom will get to you in the end, and doing it this way takes a lot of organization to keep things in order and relations cordial.
The longer you go for, especially if you envision parking up for extended periods, the better off youll be with a large living space without feeling the need for a night in a hotel once a week just so you can spread out and have a proper rest.
Space and comfort
No matter how much you like the idea of roughing it to the extreme ends of the earth, youre possibly going to be driving your vehicle for months. Wouldnt you rather it was a quiet, temperate and comfortable experience? Probably not if youre a certain type of Brit or German who equates expeditions with discomfort if not outright suffering and self-denial. Its one reason the much-admired Land Rover Defender still trundles off the production line into the arms of willing customers.
Comfort and space are something that youll only truly appreciate after many months on the road and is one reason why some travelers consider an AWD truck conversion with a cabin you can stand up in, a long wheelbase van or even a motor home. The ability to park up, switch off and simply lie back on a bed or sit at a table makes a big impact on day-to-day living. It may be overlanding but its not all about driving. There will be challenges enough waiting for you out in the world. Too hot or cold, cramped, deafened, shaken about, fighting heavy controls: all these things will tire you prematurely and are what modern SUVs have succeeded in eliminating but is what you may get in spades driving a Cold War-era truck.
In the right vehicle youll feel a lot better if the suspension is supple, the driving position is relaxed, the steering is light, the engine noise minimal, and your surroundings are at a pleasant temperature. If you also have somewhere amenable to spend the night then so much the better.
Payload or gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR)
A vehicles gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR; in the UK now called MAM or maximum authorized mass, elsewhere gross load rating) is usually printed in the registration document as well as stamped on an alloy plate riveted inside the vehicles door frame or back of the engine bay.
It adds up to the maximum permitted total weight of a vehicle including its payload, not the vehicles actual weight, which is often opaque, overlooked or inaccurate but can sometimes be divined from a brochure. Other jargon on the same theme includes: tare or UVW, which is unladen weight with fluids but no driver; and kerb weight: with a full tank and a nominal 75kg driver in blue overalls.
Leaving aside manufactures technical design limitations, in many countries a vehicles GVW is a critical legal designation, separating domestic cars from commercial vehicles. As many commercial drivers are well aware, this has ramifications for operator licensing, tax brackets, what roads it can drive and bridges it can cross, tolls, insurance and so on. All in all, a list of regulations you probably wanting to escape from and the sorts of concerns that dont exist in many African countries, where a vehicles payload is only limited by its absolute physical capacity.
//Pic Gross port. Payload? Were sitting on it
Calculating the permitted payload
In an overland sense, the GVW is a way of calculating the permitted payload. Deduct the vehicles unladen weight from the GVW and you have the payload. This is something typically overlooked by first-timers, just as their vehicles are also routinely overloaded. Long before settling on your final vehicle choice and layout, establish its payload: both in terms of chassis and tyre loads.
Manufacturers set GVWs on the conservative side (or so youd hope; in certain light-commercial categories you cant help wondering if marketing has got more to do with it). However, in an engineering and safety sense, theyre closely tied to the axles, what the tyres can safely handle, the braking set-up and performance, and the suspension as fitted from the factory. In this regard dont be surprised to find the standard suspension on a 4x4 squashed flat at its GVW limit. Uprating the tyres and suspension and is almost mandatory for overlanding (see p000 and 000). Modifying the chassis and brakes is beyond the reach of normal overland preparation; in the States its common to fit heavier-duty axles to 4x4s, though this is more to enable running huge tyres than improving payload.
Disregarding legal issues and the mistaken belief that 4x4s are immune to overloading, to ensure the safety of your vehicle and the longevity of its components, right down to the chassis, its vital to recognize payload limits. Remember too that payloads can rise dramatically when fully loaded with fuel and water and can effectively be much greater when driving off-road. Especially at the lighter end of the scale, always aspire to stay well below maximum GVW values 7080% is a good figure to aim for.
The limits of payload will also become the governing factor when making extensive modifications or full-on self builds. Suddenly bull bars, second spare wheels, huge roof tents and spare fuel tanks edge you swiftly towards the GVW limit. The sources of this information of course vary wildly, but when you see how modest the typical payload is in the list of 4x4s below you may be surprised.
Typical payloads in sample 4x4s:
2009 Jeep Rubicon 454kg (1001 lb)
2006 Hummer H3 522kg (1150 lb)
2009 Land Cruiser Amazon 620kg (1367 lb)
2009 Land Cruiser 200 V8 diesel 650kg (1433 lb)
2005 Land Rover Discovery Td5 655kg (1444 lb)
2006 Toyota Tacoma 698kg (1540 lb)
1997 Land Rover Discovery 705kg (1554 lb)
2009 Toyota Tundra V8 petrol 716kg (1580 lb)
1997 Land Cruiser 80 VX 730kg (1609 lb)
2006 GMC Sierra 856kg (1890 lb)
1998 Mercedes G-Wagen 860kg (1896 lb)
1998 Land Rover Defender 110 995kg (2194 lb)
2004 Mazda B2500 pickup 1010kg (2227 lb)
2009 Land Cruiser HZJ79 1105kg (2436 lb)
2006 RAM 2500 1180kg (2600 lb)
2010 LR Puma 130 chassis cab 1430kg (3152 lb)
Regional differences
Vehicle types and the know-how and equipment found in North America differ from whats found in Europe, Australia and South Africa. Writing about vehicle choice for my Adventure Motorcycling Handbook is much less complicated as, broadly speaking, a KLR 650 is the same bike the world over and even the same range of equipment is available in the four territories listed above.
Although I try to offer a broad Western perspective, Europe is the background from which Im writing and is the source of much overlanding lore and equipment (particularly in Germany), if not actual activity. In saying all this its worth repeating what overlanding is as defined by this book on p000: vehicle-dependent journeys most commonly undertaken from Europe, North America or Australasia to Africa, Asia and Latin America.
Australia and South Africa have a long heritage of recreational and domestic wilderness travel; spending a fortnights holiday out bush with the family is not unusual. This know-how and equipment, as well as the related publications, equips travelers from these two countries well for long-range overlanding. It also explains why, despite their relatively small combined population, youll meet many Australians and South Africans on the road. Its in their blood as it has been among western and lately eastern Europeans, where gap-year travels is just a newish name for what has long been an accepted institution. To judge by the available equipment and by magazines such as Overland Journal, in North America overlanding is only now being perceived as a travel trend, although the vehicles commonly found there are no less capable (see below).
The vehicles used by overlanders from Europe, southern Africa and Australia are also broadly similar: the major Japanese or European brands of 4x4s, vans and trucks. But a 4.2-litre Land Cruiser, a big vehicle by European standards, will seem modest to North American drivers accustomed to running a broad-shouldered 7.3-litre petrol-engined pickup. At the same time a 120hp 2.5-litre turbo-diesel returning up to 35mpg would be regarded as quaint or fashionably green, although diesel engines in non-commercial vehicles are less unusual in Canada. In the US expectations of physical size, acceptable economy, day-to-day comfort and levels of equipment diverge dramatically from whats acceptable to a Dutch or Brit overlander. The pick of 4x4s in the US is given on p000.