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Trans-Siberian Railway 2013: Which cars survived the Gobi (3/3)

Silver MustangMake no mistake: our van is a Silver Mustang.

This is Part 15 of my Trans-Siberian Photo Report, and the last one dedicated to the Gobi region in Mongolia. You can see all other Parts of this long-term Report here. We have seen in the previous Gobi post that the UAZ vans and jeeps were by far the most popular in the Gobi desert. It’s no surprise then that we did this whole trip in one of them, the UAZ Bukhanka. If in Russia this off-road van (real name: UAZ 452) has earned a few nicknames – Bukhanka: loaf (of bread), Tabletka (pill) or Golovastik (tadpole) – in Mongolia our driver has baptised its own Silver Mustang, because of its grey colour and its ability to gallop to the most isolated stretches of the Gobi.

IMG_9379Our Silver Mustang in all its glory

If you have read the previous parts in this Trans-Siberian long-term Photo Report, you will know that this UAZ off-road van is still on sale as new in Russia (here you can see me posing in front of a UAZ billboard in Tomsk). You can also get yourself a shiny new one in Mongolia for 26 million MNT (Mongolian Tugrik), the equivalent of US$15,000 which is actually pretty good value for money. As such, even though this vehicle has been in production with virtually no design change and only a few mechanical updates since 1965, ours was only 7 years-old.

Driving aidsPrayer wheel, lucky charms, compass, long-range mobile phone: we’re ready to roll (literally).

The best way to describe the UAZ Silver Mustang is a mix of VW Kombi van for its habitability and Lada Niva for 4WD ability. I was going to say Land Rover but let’s not get ahead of ourselves. In fact the Silver Mustang is totally adapted to Mongolian tracks, or rather Mongolian tracks have been made by hundreds of Silver Mustangs and as a result they go absolutely everywhere here, and can be driven at up to 80 km/h on unsealed tracks, which doesn’t seem much but given how unstable the vehicle is it is a good choice to sit at the front so you can anticipate every bump on the ground and hold on for dear life!

Matt OgiWith our driver and guide Ogi

However when it comes to steep climbing our driver Ogi bluntly put it as ‘dangerous’ and asked us to disembark and climb by foot while he was attempting it on its own. I filmed the whole thing and will upload it on here when YouTube is available to me again, in a few days when I land in Australia as the video site is blocked in China where I currently am.

Ready for takeoffReady for takeoff

A Kombi van with good 4WD ability? How on earth did this vehicle 1. not expand outside the USSR and 2. not become cult worldwide? The fact that it was used by the Soviet Army in the midst of the Cold War and that it needs around 20 litres of petrol per 100 km might start answering these questions…

Engine insideEasy access engine

The Silver Mustang has a few technical particularities, the main one being the location of its engine (from the GAZ 21), placed between the left hand driver and the front-seat passenger and accessible inside the cockpit! That’s a pretty unusual feature that turns out to be a total blessing when the temperature goes down to -30 or -40°C as it is often the case in Mongolia: no need to get out in the cold to fix it! And even at 0 to -10°C which were the temperatures we enjoyed in the Gobi it is good not to have to open the door!

Manual Four wheel drive 2“Switching off” four wheel drive after our steep Yolyn Am climb.

The body of the van is equipped with two front doors, a single-wing door on the right side and a double-wing door in the rear. There is one fuel port on each side of the van, leading to two separate fuel tanks. A tip: shake the van when you refuel to ensure the tanks are really full! Four wheel drive is activated manually, meaning you have to stop the vehicle, unscrew and fix the two front wheels and go. Do the reverse to switch off four wheel drive.

FrontBadass truck

We were a little perplexed on the first night when we learnt our driver was happy to sleep in the van and not in the ger. But we understood soon enough that the back of the van transforms into a full-on bedroom when the night has come, with a soft bed that we could only dream of inside our ger, smoking hot at the start of the night but freezing cold by the morning!

Nothingness 1Nothingness

How is it to drive? Like how it is to drive a truck designed in the sixties. The brakes need a lot of warning, you have to come to a near-stop at each big bump on the track as the suspensions are from another age, and I’ve discovered a new variant of aqua-planning: sand-planning! The Silver Mustang is feisty, stubborn and demanding. Kinda makes you think of a… silver mustang. Mmmm…

Day 1 stopFixing the wheel after one hour on Day 1: not a good sign.

Now to the main question a lot of you have I know: when did we break down? To be honest given how reputedly unreliable these vans are, I was half-exepecting to get stranded on the second day and forced to get back to Ulaanbaatar without having seen any of the Gobi. But after a worrying stop one hour into Day 1 to fix a wobbly wheel, I have to say there was absolutely no issue until Day 5 when a flash bog-down (flash because we were back up and running in five minutes) and a bout of sputtering slowed us down a little. But nothing some Mongol TLC couldn’t fix.

Nothingness 5More nothingness…

We arrived at 6pm on Day 7 in Ulaanbaatar as scheduled. Turns out our Silver Mustang was much more reliable and trustworthy than the mustang I rode on the last day which left me with a black eye and stitches on my face! I should have known better. I’m a car blogger, not a horse rider.

IMG_8451Sealed road: a luxury that only occurred on Days 1 and 7.

Back 2Near Bayanzag, Gobi.

Bogged downBogged down… only for 5 minutes.

CloudsGersFirst ger camp in the Gobi

MandalgoviGetting a civilisation fix in Mandalgovi before the Gobi desert.

Nothingness 2Service stationNothingness 4UAZ logoUAZ logo

Nothingness 3Near Bayanzag, Gobi.

This Post Has 4 Comments
  1. Thank you for relating us all about that marvellous trip, I have learned a lot about that part of the world. Will look with new eyes to the old Bukhanka.

  2. The engine between the front seats is actually very common for Asian “Cab Forward” vans. See Totota Hiace, Nissan Urvan/Caravan/NV350, Mitsubishi Delica, L300 and L400, Hyundai H100 and H200 (which are the same as the aforementioned Mitsu’s), Suzuki Carry, etc. etc.

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