We want to hear your road trip horror stories! (Inspired by the Nurburgring trip that made me despise the Audi RS7)

We want to hear your road trip horror stories! Whether it’s break downs, traffic, illness… whatever caused you to wish you’d never set off on your journey, we want to hear it! Hit the comments and we’ll round up the best. To inspire you, here’s a story I never thought I’d tell.

We want to hear your road trip horror stories! Whether it’s break downs, traffic, illness… whatever caused you to wish you’d never set off on your journey, we want to hear it! Hit the comments and we’ll round up the best. To inspire you, here’s a story I never thought I’d tell. It happened last year, and was supposed to form part of a feature about road tripping to the Nurburgring, but I was so thoroughly fed up when I returned that I never wrote it up and tried to forget it happened. So, in the spirit of sharing, here goes!

I get to do some pretty cool things in this job, and when Audi offered me the chance to drive an RS7 to the Nurburgring to watch the six hour World Endurance Championship race I was obviously pretty excited. I’d driven an RS6 shortly before that and absolutely adored it, so as I dropped behind the wheel to set off on the 400-mile journey to motorsport Mecca, with four countries and an ocean between me and my destination, I was in good spirits.

The first problem occurred when I got to the ferry terminal late due to some crazy traffic, and had to wait an extra hour to get on board a later boat. No biggie, I thought. Once in France it was all plain sailing, but then I hit Belgium, and tried to make my way around Brussels. My carefully laid plan to avoid the city during rush hour was now screwed thanks to my little ferry mishap, so I found myself stationary on Brussels’ ring road getting more and more fed up. Then the sat nav popped up saying there was traffic on my route, and asked if I’d like a diversion around it. Hell yeah, I would! So with my new route in place I skipped off the highway… and into the town centre. Yep, the Audi took me out of the frying pan and into the fire, so I spent the next three hours in stop start traffic trying to get out of the gridlocked city.

Speaking of stop start, the RS7’s stop start tech pushed me to boiling point until I dived into the menus to figure out how to turn it off. You see, in most cars the engine stops when you have your foot on the brake and are stationary, then starts again as soon as you lift off the brake. Same’s true of the Audi, but for some reason it also applies the handbrake when the engine turns off, and is slow to release it, so you lift off the brake, push the accelerator and nothing happens, so you push a bit harder and then the handbrake suddenly releases, catapulting you forward. It means you’re sat in a near-£100k car with everyone watching you kangaroo about. Not a cool look.

With Brussels finally behind me, I started to make some progress. As my destination grew ever closer, the fuel gauge was dropping closer and closer to empty, but I’d managed to keep the range above the remaining mileage, so my plan was to get near to the Nurburgring before filling up to avoid expensive highway fuel prices. Unfortunately, the Nurburgring is in the middle of nowhere, and none of the rural petrol stations were open late (yeah, it was past bed time by the time I even got close to the circuit), which left me on the orange light in a 550bhp car cruising through the Eifel forest well below the speed limit. Not cool and super stressful!

We want to hear your road trip horror stories! (Inspired by the Nurburgring trip that made me despise the Audi RS7)

Once I finally made it to the circuit, my spirits were briefly lifted by the famous red Nurburgring sign, but that was short lived. I was staying in the hotel that’s attached to the circuit, but the sat nav was saying I’d already arrived, so I asked a car park attendant how to get to the hotel. Unfortunately, he didn’t speak very good English (better than my German, though), but from what I could gather he was saying I couldn’t park at the hotel and that I had to speak to some other guys. Well, I was more than annoyed as I’d been told I had parking, so I approached a group of other attendants further down the road. Again, none spoke English, so I was left standing in a field at midnight, unwittingly 100 yards from my destination, waiting for someone to help me. Eventually a bloke turns up and tries to make me give him €20 to park in his field. I politely declined and as Friday turned to Saturday I went crawling along looking for the hotel. I finally found it just next to where I’d been gormlessly standing for 15 minutes before, and a very polite hotel employee ushered me into the car park beside a Porsche 911 GT3 RS and Koenigsegg One:1. I was too exhausted to take a picture, and the latter was gone by morning, sorry!

Despite being shattered from what was ultimately a 12 hour journey (should’ve taken eight hours, tops) I had an utterly fantastic weekend watching the racing and mucking about on the Nordschleife with Boosted Boris. But the road trip from hell wasn’t finished with me yet.

The journey home was fairly uneventful, though the sports seats were giving me chronic back ache. I even managed to avoid Brussels city centre, and was treated to an incredible electrical storm as I left Belgium.

Parked up at Calais, waiting out the strike
Parked up at Calais, waiting out the strike

As I arrived at Calais, the border guard clocked me in and sent me on my merry way with a smile and a quick “by the way, the French ferry drivers are striking, no ships have left all night.” My heart sank, and as I eventually found where I was supposed to be going I joined a long queue of fed up holidaymakers in a torrential downpour. I also discovered that night that the RS7 does not make a comfortable bed.

After about 10 hours in the claustrophobic Audi, we were finally let onto a ferry as daylight broke, and a few hours later I parked the RS7 up outside my flat, stumbled into my flat and collapsed into bed. The whole experience gave me an utter hatred of the RS7, and whenever I see one I can’t help but recoil in disgust. It looks great and goes like stink, but I have too many bad memories…

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Comments

Anonymous

30th December 2014
My mates and I were driving from Italy to Munchen (Germany) to celebrate the last of the year. The wheather forecast predicted heavy snow for the day, but that was not a big issue, since my car had 4 brand new winter tyres. So as we approached the snow storm in Austria (200km from home), I turned the wipers on, but nothing happened. In the end, we managed to steal a window cleaner from a petrol station and we spend the rest of the journey with heater at full power to melt the snow as it hit the windscreen.
Horrific, but it’s an adventure to tell on and on.

02/06/2016 - 18:55 |
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Anonymous

A couple days ago was my worst, after driving my team down to Buckmore Park and back to compete in the British Universities Karting Championship, I was finally dropping the last of the team off when the road I was on in the city was blocked by a crowd of 200-300 drunk students on a bar crawl who had started to pelt the taxi in front of me and my car with bottles (denting all of the cars) and trying to get into both cars. The taxi panicked at this point and slammed the car into reverse and promptly reversed straight into the front of my car, after this a gap formed in the crowd and all cars managed to drive away from the ruckus. Most definitely the worst ending to any of the road trips I have been on.

02/06/2016 - 19:07 |
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Anonymous

How about losing ur left rear wheel along with hub while moving at 80km/h down a mountain road. Hahaha i still remember i was looking the wheel moving pass me while my car is draging its self to stop. Never buy this piece of s**t. Especially if ur from Pakistan

02/06/2016 - 20:39 |
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Anonymous

So I’m a huge MINIac, and I make an annual trip from Massachusetts to North Carolina for MINIs on the Dragon. One year we decided to go visit my sister in Delaware on our way down. After we spent a couple days visiting her, we left to go to NC. We left fairly early so we would hopefully beat traffic on the 495 loop around Washington DC. Unfortunately we ended up hitting traffic and hitting it hard. We sat in traffic for at least 3 hours and went maybe half a mile. Right as traffic started moving a little bit, almost every single light on my dashboard lit up, my power steering pump stopped working, and my ECU went into limp mode meaning I couldn’t rev it past 2k rpms. Since my MINI has navigation, I only have dummy lights for everything. Luckily I had a ScanGaugeII to monitor coolant and voltage and other things. So I immediately look over at it and see the coolant temps are climbing fast, and the voltage want reading anything. I was in the 2nd lane from the left and needed to get off immediately. Luckily traffic had moved just right so I could get over to the right lane, at which point I cut off a Prius, who decided to lay on their horn and flip me off. Mind you, my 4-ways were on. At this point my coolant temps had gone up from 195° to 235° and I knew I had to shut it down to avoid it overheating. So I killed it and coasted down the off ramp while trying to find a good spot to park it. I immediately checked the engine codes, followed by a Google search for those codes. Turns out that my crank pulley, which is also a harmonic balancer, had separated and the belt driving everything else like supercharger, waterpump and alternator was no longer spinning. I frantically started Googling for a MINI shop near by while my girlfriend was calling AAA. So I found one that was pretty close, and I called them and explained what was going on and the fact that I needed to be in NC for a drive I was leading at 6am. When we got there, the shop was super helpful. They got it on a lift, checked out, confirmed the crank pulley separated, repaired it and got me back on the road in about 6 hours. We got back on the road and got to our hotel for 2am, so I had to unload my MINI and then try to get a couple hours of sleep so I could be ready for my drive at 6am. That was a rough 2 days! The crappy thing about it was that since my MINI had about 150k miles on it, I always bring my entire tool kit with me, and even had a spare supercharger “just in case”. The only thing I wouldn’t have been able to fix would have been the crank pulley. This was in my 2005 MINI Cooper S, a car I still daily drive and take down there every year!

02/06/2016 - 21:41 |
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Anonymous

you were at the Ring and noone spoke english? thats weird, whenever im there (i live about 100km from it) theres always loads of people speaking english, no matter native speakers or not. mustve talked to the wrong people :P

02/06/2016 - 23:33 |
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Simii

Peugeot 406 going to pick up a new engine for my e34. 2 hyperactive friends and way too much coffee

02/08/2016 - 10:32 |
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Anonymous

I once made a 120km trip into the heart of the desert, which isn’t so bad unless it’s in the summer. Going up and down the dunes my tire went flat, so I had to change it in the 40 degree weather and when I got back in the car the a/c wasn’t bringing in any cool air. Anyways so we decided to drive around and 15 minutes later my friend’s tire went flat, and so the same process began with his car. On the way back, my brother was leading in his car and we found him on the side of the road with what looked like a tire that exploded, so we did the same process for the third time. Let’s just say changing a tire when the heat is so intense your feet get fried, get back home sweaty af, isn’t exactly fun. It was so hot a cold shower was awesome!

02/12/2016 - 16:17 |
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