TLCA 2026 Rubithon Breakfast Run

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Location
Pacifica CA
This is the the official 2026 Rubithon Thursday Breakfast Morning thread.

I am looking forward to meeting you all on this years trip. My name is Doug, I will be leading the run this year with my co-driver 10 year old daughter ( 9 year Rubithon Veteran) Isabella and my son, Dominik in his battered small tired 40 series.

I have driven this trail a bunch of times in a both a mini truck and in my 80 series. The 80 I will be driving is setup in a pretty typical fashion with 3" of lift, 35" tires, 4.88 difs., low t case gears, RCV front axles, front and rear lockers, all the requisite armor, dents, winch, snorkel, fridge, tools.

This will be a traditional Loon entrance to the main Rubicon Trail. This unique run has a pre-paid private breakfast at the Ice House Resort before we start the trail. The breakfast is scheduled to start at 0800. We ask that we all get there early as in 0700 so that we can do the the tech inspections and insurance paperwork early and be able to hit the road right after breakfast. If you are not at Ice House by the time breakfast is finished we will be moving on. If you are not at Loon Lake by 0900 we will be moving on. If you arrive late and feel comfortable on the trail by yourself feel free to hit the trail and catch up.

There are a few "motel room" cabins at the resort, some RV spots and a tent camping area. The rooms are way rustic but "OK".
I usually fuel up at fresh pond on #50 before the turnoff to ice house road. Topping off at the pump at ice house resort is not a bad idea (be prepared to spend $10 a gallon). Topping off at Ice House and driving straight through and exiting at Tahoma I have never needed to dip into a Jerry can. I always pack a 5 gallon Jerry can just in case I have to drive the full trail back out due to the Cadillac Hill exit being closed (due to fire or lots of snow).

Our first day's destination will be Buck Island Lake were we will camp.
On group runs like this we will be taking the easier lines and getting everyone there safely. With a sizeable group it is important to keep things moving and stay in our rigs for short stops. a prepacked lunch is a great idea. I will do everything that I can to get us there early enough to have some down time and a swim before dark. This years snowpack seems light but it's still too early to tell, We could have a full ice cold lake or a muddy pond full of stumps.

Friday we will continue on to Rubicon Springs where folks will typically scatter and find a camp spot. At that point the official group run is complete and we are all on our own for camping. Groups often stay together to camp and some of us will do that but it is not required.
Sunday everyone mostly exits up Cadillac Hill, there is a local 4x4 club, the Hi-lows that provide assistance.

The Rubithon signup page will list mandatory safety and recovery gear that you will need, as well as equipment requirements. Minimum tire size is 35's and a 3" lift, you should have serious armor and a strong passenger to stack rocks doesn't hurt either.
Make sure a heavy strap (no hooks on the end) and a fire extinguisher are readily accessible. I like the strap on the passenger floor board so I'm not hunting for it or dealing with a swing out bumper while in a precarious situation.
I will walk around camp and offer a wrench so that everyone can check their knuckle studs before during and after each day on the trail. If you are driving an 80, I do have some tips for mechanical preparation, sway bar advice, etc. I do carry specific parts for an 80 series such as a steering box, birfield and axles and all the parts to repair a knuckle/studs (minus the actual knuckle), tie rod ends, rear drive shaft and a spark plug repair kit (don't ask).
We will be using 2m Ham for our communications, most likely 146.400. I recommend obtaining a license but don't let that stop you from picking up a radio. I have a Baofeng hand held, they are inexpensive. I have a file (chirp) that can be uploaded to the radio which I can share ahead of time. It is very easy if you have a sync cable.
If you have made it and read down this far. ;) It would be nice to get to know each other a little better before joining up on the trail. This is a good place for introductions, to ask questions, and get answers. It's also a good place to share photos taken during the run.
Doug
AKA Devil's Slide Doug
 
registration link.

 
Thanks Doug for starting a thread and including all the details, the one question I did have, which you answered is the communication bit. Seeing I don't have a ham radio, what is the best bang for my buck radio to get? I am not real good with technology so I'd hate to buy something that isn't compatible.

For an introduction, my name is Deny and I will be taking my 1983 BJ60 on this trip. It is SOA with 4.88 gears, lockrite in the front, and aussie locker in the rear and riding on 36 in TSL's. To give it a bit more jam then the stock 80 hp the 3B puts out, I have put a homebrew turbo on it, which gives it a nice little whistle. Its got all the rocker/rear quarter protection and lots of dents from squeezing it through overgrown trails here in northern BC. I have been wanting to go on the Rubicon since I first started getting Toyota trails back in 2000, so to say I am excited about going on this trip is an understatement ;)
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Welcome, you might be tail gunner. As far as coms go. Baofengs are dirt cheap. I program all the freq. repeaters and tones using my laptop but you can use one right out of the box in simplex mode and manually dial in the frequency.
 
Sounds great, wherever you want to stick me, I'll be happy, you're the boss ;) What about this radio, it has a lot of jargon that I don't understand, but it says its a ham radio, so in theory it should work?

 
Sounds great, wherever you want to stick me, I'll be happy, you're the boss ;) What about this radio, it has a lot of jargon that I don't understand, but it says its a ham radio, so in theory it should work?

The “tail gunner” comment was sort of a joke/maybe not because you’re driving a diesel with stinky exhaust. We will actually assess were to put folks on the day when everyone shows up. The radio you linked is perfectly adequate. It looks like it has the larger battery and USB charging which is very convenient. I have a chirp file for programming the UV-5R which I could share if you also purchase the programming cable but honestly you can just dial in the frequency on the trail using the buttons and be OK.
 
Thanks Doug for starting a thread and including all the details, the one question I did have, which you answered is the communication bit. Seeing I don't have a ham radio, what is the best bang for my buck radio to get? I am not real good with technology so I'd hate to buy something that isn't compatible.

For an introduction, my name is Deny and I will be taking my 1983 BJ60 on this trip. It is SOA with 4.88 gears, lockrite in the front, and aussie locker in the rear and riding on 36 in TSL's. To give it a bit more jam then the stock 80 hp the 3B puts out, I have put a homebrew turbo on it, which gives it a nice little whistle. Its got all the rocker/rear quarter protection and lots of dents from squeezing it through overgrown trails here in northern BC. I have been wanting to go on the Rubicon since I first started getting Toyota trails back in 2000, so to say I am excited about going on this trip is an understatement ;)
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Your wagon looks pretty well built/armored. I assume it had good skid plates protecting the belly. Depending on how tall it is it will be fun in the off camber stuff. Do you have any sort of crawler gears or do you lug the diesel?
 
Your wagon looks pretty well built/armored. I assume it had good skid plates protecting the belly. Depending on how tall it is it will be fun in the off camber stuff. Do you have any sort of crawler gears or do you lug the diesel?
I also highly recommend carrying some spare axle shafts/birfield and drive shafts. Assuming you still have the stock semi float axles?

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lol, yeah its a bit stinky. I used to run homemade biodiesel back in the day in my old BJ42 and fellow coastal cruiser members used to get upset at me cause I smelt like french fries and it made them hungry ;) Sweet, I'll order up the radio and get it in the mail, thanks.
 
Your wagon looks pretty well built/armored. I assume it had good skid plates protecting the belly. Depending on how tall it is it will be fun in the off camber stuff. Do you have any sort of crawler gears or do you lug the diesel?
I did install skid plate this winter. It is pretty tall, but not obnoxiously tall, have yet to roll it but come close ;) No extra crawler gears except the 4.88 in the diffs, but the diesel torque seems not bad on the rocks as I used to wheel my BJ42 with 4.11 and 35s quite a bit on rocky trials on the coast and it seemed pretty decent. Also have Longfield axles and birfields, with a longfield birfield spare. Also have spare driveshafts I carry with me. do you think I should put in extra front and rear axle shafts as well while I am at it? and yes I am still rear semi float.
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I did install skid plate this winter. It is pretty tall, but not obnoxiously tall, have yet to roll it but come close ;) No extra crawler gears except the 4.88 in the diffs, but the diesel torque seems not bad on the rocks as I used to wheel my BJ42 with 4.11 and 35s quite a bit on rocky trials on the coast and it seemed pretty decent. Also have Longfield axles and birfields, with a longfield birfield spare. Also have spare driveshafts I carry with me. do you think I should put in extra front and rear axle shafts as well while I am at it? and yes I am still rear semi float.
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I have seen the rear long side axle shaft break a few times. When I broke a birfield it also took out the inner axle shaft or vis a versa.
 
Oh ok, might as well bring them as I have them lying around in the shed. Knock on wood I have only broken a smirfield on this truck which is why I upgraded to longfields, and tore the stearing arm off so will bring some extra knuckle studs. I did also break the four remaining rear wheel studs off during a river crossing, but that one was my fault for not changing the two previously broken studs prior to the trip ;) I do hope I can make the trip without breaking anything as this truck has been pretty reliable for me over the 15 years I have owned it (again knock on wood).
 
I’m not trying to scare you, LOL. It’s just good to be prepared. Most of my trips through the trail have been trouble free (not counting bumps and bruises to armor and sheet metal). I’ve only broken one birfield/axle, I’ve damaged more than one rear driveshaft, that’s just a bigger risk with a long wheelbase rig. I’ve seen a a few wagons break rear semi float axles on the trail and was involved in delivering and helping repair one in Moab also a few years back. There are some ledges that are notorious for snapping rear pinions on spring overs (though mostly on SWB 40s with a lot of axle wrap. The granite can go from high traction to slippery without much warning. We try to avoid all that shock loading. I bet your 60 is flexy enough to keep all the wheels on the ground most of the time. That being said we will stick to the easier lines. If necessary we will stack rocks or use recovery straps or winch when necessary rather than bouncing and spinning and breaking parts. My goal is to get to camp without grease under my finger nails and still have to time to take a dip in the lake during daylight before making dinner.
 
ha ha, I know its better to be prepared and not need it then scrambling to find parts after things have gone south. I shouldn't have a problem with axle wrap as I have an anti wrap bar, but have seen my brother snap his without anti wrap bar. I am all for taking the easier lines as where we wheel is pretty remote and doing stupid things can cause you a few day hike to get to cell service.
 
I like the strap on the passenger floor board so I'm not hunting for it or dealing with a swing out bumper while in a precarious situation.
This ^^^ exactly. Being able reach a strap and hand it out the passenger side window while keeping a foot on the brake pedal can be very important.
 
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