Steel Pass, Dedeckera Canyon to Saline Valley

woodbee-SMB

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 8, 2009
Posts
294
Location
Rohnert Park, CA
Cheryl and I headed out to Death Valley N.P. at 6:00 A.M. on the 7th of March for a quick 4 days, three night, four wheeling maiden voyage in the Sportsmobile. We went over the Sierras via highway 50 and South Lake Tahoe to highway 395. We ran into a lot of snow but no ice on the roads. Fueled up at Big Pine CA and then headed out Death Valley Road on our way to Eureka Dunes and Steel Pass.

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On Death Valley Road looking back toward Big Pine



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We stopped at the entrance to Saline Valley Road (north pass) and it was closed due to heavy snow. So we will have to go out the South Pass if we make it through Steel Pass and Dedeckera Canyon into Saline Valley.


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Nice contrast


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Eureka Dunes are huge and the mountains around them are just beautiful.


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We spent the night on the back side of the dunes a short distance from Steel Pass.


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We headed toward Steel Pass about 8:00 the next morning.


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When we got there it is a beautiful view looking back at Eureka Dunes.


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We parked at the entrance to Steel Pass. I told Cheryl when we check it out I will not try it unless I know we can make it through, not, I think we can do it.


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We took about an hour to check it out and take pictures, the pictures really don't show the steepness nor the narrowness of the pass. After walking the pass I knew we could do it.


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Looking back at Steel Pass


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I would drive up to each step, get out and we would make a plan on how to navigate the step.


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This is the first real four wheeling I have done sense the 1980s when I had my Jeep CJ-5. Wow! what a difference, the Sportsmobile is 24' long and weighs in at a little over 10,000 pounds. It's amazing how it just crawled over everything it came to without any spin of the tires


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The third of the 4 steps was the biggest challenge. It is narrow at the bottom and widens at the top. I measured our wheel base at 81 inches. The bottom of the step is much narrower than our wheel base, so I knew I would have to drive up on the rock wall and do a heavy rub on the sidewalls of the tires.


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Cheryl did a great job spotting for me and trying to take pictures at the same time.


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I would not want to go the other way with our Extended Body Sportsmobile, I believe there would be a lot of scrapping in the back bottom.


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Rub


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Ding!


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Ding!
Very minor damage


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Moving on


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A nice view looking back at Steel Pass and Eureka Dunes


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Dedeckera Canyon was also quite interesting, some real tight spots where we rubbed the side walls on both sides. The 26 miles from Steel Pass and through Dedeckera Canyon is a beautiful drive, we took our time, 6 hours to get to the lower springs in Saline Valley where we spent the second night.


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Saline Valley and the Inyo Mountains way off in the distance


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Lower Springs and Palm Springs and the Salt Lake at the base of the Inyo Mountains


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About 8:00 the next morning we headed out to check out some things in Saline Valley. We drove north on Saline Valley Road about 10 miles and four wheeled up to Crystal Ridge to check out what crystals may be found. Lots of crystals but it would take hard rock mining tools to get to them


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I did find a Scorpion while I was digging around looking for crystals


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Just below Crystal Ridge is the Waucoba Tungsten Mine. They mined copper in the late 1880's and also mined tungsten during World War II


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Old oil can


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We then headed back south on Saline Valley Road and stopped at the turn off to the hot springs. Somebody did some art work on the rocks to identify the turn off to the springs


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We moved on south about another 25 miles and found a place to pull over for the night. We had a great view of Saline Valley from the south just before going over the mountains to highway 190. The next morning we stopped at highway 190 and aired up the tires and put the front sway bar disconnects back on.
We fueled up in Lone Pine and had a great hamburger and then headed home. We got back home at 8:30 Wednesday evening the 10th of March
 
Excellent report and pics, thanks.

And very importantly, now I know that an EB SMB can make it through steel pass into the springs. Well done.

Rob
 
You did better than I did in not dinging your rims on Steel pass. That tight spot loves to grab the bolts on faux M/T beadlocks.

Great photos. Makes me want to go back.

Phil
 
BTW, Inyo County always puts up the Road Closed signs during the winter on both North and South Passes due to liability. It is often not "closed" at all and worth a look see.
 
saline said:
BTW, Inyo County always puts up the Road Closed signs during the winter on both North and South Passes due to liability. It is often not "closed" at all and worth a look see.

I'd guess that's for plausibility deniability by the county if you get stranded.
 
Great write up. Thanks for posting!
This is on my list, now I need to move it to the top.

Thanks again!

steve :c3:
 
saline said:
BTW, Inyo County always puts up the Road Closed signs during the winter on both North and South Passes due to liability. It is often not "closed" at all and worth a look see.

We had no plan to go into Saline Valley through the north pass, I had been planing to try Steel Pass before I picked up our SMB last December. Several people at the hot springs in Saline Valley also told us it was closed due to very deep snow.
On the road closed sign, the piece of paper said "big 4x4 and big snow tires, you might make it in".

Woody
 
Absolutely wonderful pics. I'm sure Phil and I both said..." yup that's where we both dinged a rim..I busted the plastic cover over the rear hub"!
Thanks for the memory. It's doable for any SMB..side ladders excluded and a spotter is a must but the worst section is only about 100yds. in length.
Not to mention the the wide flat smooth section over the pass out of Saline Valley where is broke 2 tires!
 
Hum...I see you have no ladders. So like Bw said, I have twin ladders. Do you think it's doable with ladders on both sides Woody? We had planned that route now I'm not sure. Great writeup...thanks DaveB
 
daveb said:
Hum...I see you have no ladders. So like Bw said, I have twin ladders. Do you think it's doable with ladders on both sides Woody? We had planned that route now I'm not sure. Great writeup...thanks DaveB

I don't think I would even try it with the wheel spacers some are talking about and that is only about 4" wider. Ladders I would say no way.

Woody
 
Bummer. I also have a full floater. I thought maybe you could ride high on one side or something. Guess that one will have to be crossed off the list. Thanks for the heads up Woody....Dave
 
My van is an RB. I don't have spacers. The narrowest spot on that section is probably 3"-4" less than the tire width. To negotiate it you have to get as close as possible to the vertical wall on the drivers side..mirrors in...because as you move through the opening the right wheels climb up the angular rock face and then drop back. For a moment you tip left to within an inch or 2 of the wall on your left. Phil's van is an EB and I think he has spacers. I broke a hub cover on the right rear and dinged the rim. He dinged his rim. Woodbee's pics show the spot exactly.
 
wow...I just don't know. I'd like to hear from somebody that has done it with ladders on both sides but if you have to fold in the mirriors??? Is the worst spot easy to back out of if it's too tight?
 
Look at the pics with woodbee standing in front. That is the spot. Yes you could back down but by now you are about 10 miles from the dunes headed north to south. Worst case, you could unscrew the ladders!!
 
The narrow width is down at tire level, not up at ladder level. I have one ladder and wasn't concerned at all about it. I do have spacers as well (I don't recall if Chris has spacers). We both dinged our wheels. I think a slightly different line would have avoided the wheel damage.

Go do it. It's a beautiful area.

Phil
 

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