Touareg conquers world altitude record
Where others fail, the Volkswagen Touareg just keeps going up and up - to an altitude of exactly 6,080 metres. The Touareg Expedition from Volkswagen Individual has gained entry into the Guinness Book of Records for the highest altitude recorded for a...
Where others fail, the Volkswagen Touareg just keeps going up and up - to an altitude of exactly 6,080 metres. The Touareg Expedition from Volkswagen Individual has gained entry into the Guinness Book of Records for the highest altitude recorded for a vehicle.
On January 29, battling against icy winds and a lack of oxygen, the expedition team fought its way through the lunar landscape of the Ojos del Salado, the world's highest volcano, in a standard Touareg Expedition to achieve the world's altitude record for vehicles.
This is the highest point on the surface of the Earth that a vehicle can reach and safely return from. On February 16 the confirmation came from London: the record has been officially recognised by the Guinness Book of Records.
The Touareg has thus impressively proven its strengths in extreme conditions and surpassed the performance of all other off-road vehicles. The route of the team of eight, headed by expedition leader Rainer Zietlow, first took them through the Atacama desert, the world's driest area.
The base camp was located at 4,400 m above sea level above the salt lake Laguna Santa Rosa, famous for its pink flamingos. From there the trail continued over stones and pebbles with an 80 per cent gradient, snow fields and soft volcanic sand.
At the wheel of the VW Touareg was Ronald Bormann, who has won the European Truck Trail competition several times. In sections where rocks as large as a man blocked the path, the winch, fitted as standard to the Touareg Expedition, helped the team on its way.
The additional spotlights, also part of the standard equipment package, fitted to the roof rack, containing spare wheels and rescue equipment, lit the way through the night to the rock-strewn summit.
As the air became thinner at 5,000 m above sea level, the crew was given additional oxygen by altitude specialist Dr Rainald Fischer. In this way, the chairman of the Association for Mountain and High Altitude Medicine (BExMED) was able to ward off the potentially life-threatening altitude sickness.
The Institute for Cartography at the University of Dresden helped to select the route to the summit following a recent four-week survey of the summit region to make new maps. The knowledge gained by the expedition will help the scientists verify their work.
However, the most important scientific aspect of the expedition to a region endangered by earthquakes and volcanic eruptions was the installation of a seismographic station, managed by the Geological Research Centre in Potsdam.
This station makes it possible to register eruptions directly above possible earthquake focus sites, thus advancing global earthquake research. In town, on country roads and on the motorway, as a service vehicle at the Dakar rally, as a globetrotter in the Touareg "Experience 360°" circumnavigation of the world, or as an expedition vehicle used for scientific purposes - the Volkswagen Touareg has once again impressively shown that it is equipped ex-factory for a wide range of situations.