48 State Contiguous Roadtrip in 10 Days and 10,000 miles.
On March 5th I am going to embark on a monumental 10 to 12 day roadtrip from MSP airport in Minneapolis and heading east to Fort Drum, NY over to Lake Champlain, to Bar Harbor, ME to Cape Cod, to NYC to Washington D.C thru W. Virginia to Lexington, KY to S.E Tennessee thru North Carolina to Charleston Harbor, SC to Savanna, GA to Panama City Beach, Fl to New Orleans, to Texarkana, Arkansas to Oklahoma then onto Dallas down to San Antonio, TX thru New Mexico to Four Corners to Elko, NV to Lake Tahoe, CA onto Napa, CA then to Portland, OR, then Seattle, WA thru Idaho, Montana, Cody, WY, and finally thru N.Dak and returning my rental car to MSP and driving home to S. Dakota.
I would like this trip to be on backroads so I can see the backbone of America. Granted I have already done this type of trip but only in certain portions of this amazing great country of ours. Now is my chance to drive a completely nonscripted trip and see what most people driving on interstates don't get to see. I"ll be Facebooking the whole trip and blogging somewhere (not sure where yet) ideas?
Anyone want to figure out mileage for this trip? I think it is somewhere btw 8500 miles and 10,000 miles.
I have ten days plus a few if it needs be. Sleeping in car, hostels and couch surfing then showering in fuel stops on interstates and friends homes.
Ideas, Thoughts?
I have already travelled througout all 50 states and this is just a spontaneous roadtrip b/c I have just found out wife is pregnant and due in Nov. so my roadtripping days are coming to a slight end here shortly.
My main goal of this is to get sponsored by a car company to take a 10,000 mile, if not longer, roadtrip throughout Europe next Spring or Fall. I did a Munich, Germany thru all of Austria, Switzerland, Italy, Monaco, France and back to Germany in 2 weeks and 4500 miles last Fall. I rented a BMW 3series station wagon getting a average mpg of 42.6 which was crazy since I found out the car went 138 on the autobahn in Austria and I raced a Porsche in Monaco.
Has anyone ever been sponsored by car companies to showcase lastest and greatest most fuel efficienct model? I love travelling and seeing the world's backroads. I would think that a car company would love to sponsor someone like me driving the most fuel efficient car in the lineup to prove to buyers that their car gets the best gas mileage. Any takers out there?
maybe I'm missing something
Welcome to the RTA Forum!
Sorry, but I just don't think I see the point of your trip. How and Why exactly do you think that driving about 1,000+ miles a day for 10 days is going to show a car company that they should give you a car to take another trip in the future?
First of all, if I was a marketing executive of a car company, you showing me that you are willing to drive 20 hours a day every day for 10 days really wouldn't impress me much. If anything, it would make me question your judgement and maturity as someone with whom I might be doing business with.
Second, if you haven't noticed, these aren't exactly booming times for the auto industry. Any sort of promotional/sponsorship is going to have to have a far more specific goal than just driving around and showcasing a fuel efficent car. You would have to have a very specific plan to show why your idea would be drawing new customers to them - and you're going to have to prove that you can do that. Proving that you can drive a large number of miles in a short amount of time really won't do anything to show that you can sell, and no company is just going to give you a sponsorship so you can drive around on a vacation on their dime.
If you've got some more specifics with your plan that perhaps I haven't thought of here, I'd love to hear about them, but otherwise, I see a lot more wishful thinking than realistic goals.
It's not right either way.
I think we should draw the line under this one, you will not get the support you are looking for by driving 750 -1000 miles a day on a multi day trip, it simply isn't safe. You may achieve this trip in the time you have said, you may not, the same as a drunk might think he safely drove home after too many drinks and it's OK to do it again. Statistics don't lie and being "normal or abnormal" doesn't come in to it, if you do this trip you must accept that not only is it a risk to you but those that share the road with you.
Good luck with whatever you do.
[Please do not start another thread on this trip or you will lose your ability to post here, thankyou.