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…

Sponsored Posts

Comments

Anonymous

Again, not a horror story but I did 3000 miles in my 2000 Peugeot 206 1.4i. Newcastle to France onto Austria and back through Germany,Belgium and Holland. Not one issue, well except the central locking stopped working briefly! Although, my parents used to own a Renault Espace - we spent 5 hours stuck on the M25 after the EGR valve got stuck….again!

02/05/2016 - 19:45 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

I have no problems in my 15k Km road trip to the Nurburgring. Here is my story http://eabul.blogspot.com

02/05/2016 - 19:52 |
0 | 0
etitanic

Last summer, i thought it would be a great idea to drive from Boston to Connecticut with my ex-girlfriend in her Saturn to go to an amusement park for a date. We made it 80% of the way there, and as we were stopped at a red light, her car started smoking. Since she isnt interested in cars whatsoever she thought her engine had blown, but in reality there was just a coolant leak. She immediately started to freak out and cry, but i calmed her down and we went to an auto parts store to buy coolant, and it was temporarily taken care of. We then had to stop every 20 miles or so to refill the coolant and let the car cool down the rest of the way there and the entire way back, turning a 5 hour round trip into an 8 hour pilgrimage. Because of that i now have an infinite hate for Saturns, even though they arent necessarily terrible cars

02/05/2016 - 19:56 |
1 | 0
Travis Curtis

Half way on a four hour trip to an off road park one of the trucks drive shaft broke and went rolling down the interstate, luckily he managed to get the truck to an exit with a truck stop, after that we called a tow truck (Thank you AAA), and by the time the tow truck got there it was around 11:30, and we were still around 2 1/2 hours from the off road park, so we just ended up calling it a night and slept in our vehicles at the truck stop.

02/05/2016 - 20:04 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

Sitting in the back of a car on the way back from a concert when the driver started dozing off a few times, in the mountains of PA. Didn’t take long for me to take over driving privileges, since I was wide awake anyway.

02/05/2016 - 20:14 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

On my honey moon in Scotland my little 1997 Opel Corsa had enough and spat out all it fluids filled them all up again and every few miles afterwards but we headed to London as my sister was expecting us. Potting along the motorway in morning traffic the bonnet picks that time to open up I’m in the fast lane can’t see anything and the poor wife is leaning out of the window with her crutch trying to push the bonnet down we some how got into the hard shoulder safely I don’t know how but we tied the bonnet shut and set off again
About 30miles later two new front tires had enough and left the car again we fixed them thankfully we were in the slow lane this time. At this point I hate this little car and was thinking about setting it a blaze.
Almost to London we stop off to pick up my cousin setting of from his house the back wheel just falls off for no reason what so every got it back and took a nut of each wheel.
Now we are less then 10 miles from my sister house and the car battery exploded got one from a scrapyard after all that got to my sisters house parked the car in her drive way for a week and then drove back to Ireland had more trouble on the way home everything from the door not opening to lights not working but we got back to Irish soil and the thing ran like a clock. I drove that car to the scrap yard and told them to crush it while I watch.

02/05/2016 - 20:33 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Last summer I bought an old Audi 100 Avant from 1985 for €350 with only one goal in mind. To drive from my home in the Netherlands to Bulgaria… and back! I only gave the car a tune up and changed a faulty wheel bearing. Needless to say we were ready for the road! Just getting there we encountered so many problems:
-First the engine sputtered and died on us a few times.
-The engine sometimes would overheat which forced us to blow full heat in the summer.
-When we arrived at the Serbian border we were denied entry.
-The car overheat and we had to push the car over three hours back into Croatia.
-After a 3 hour sleep the car started again and we finally got to Bulgaria via Hungary and Romania (an 600km. detour).
-When the car did die the only way to start it up again was to blow into the fuel lines and wait until it shot back in your face… and mouth. Yum.

All in all we made it and even drove it back home. I don’t know how our Germany lady with coronary heart disease made it after 6.000 kilometers but God do I love that car.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U3RC5RsN14I

02/05/2016 - 20:37 |
0 | 0
HighwayDrift

My uncle likes to tell a story about how he and a friend from Highschool drove across country in his buddy’s old GTO. They stopped at a restaurant in the middle of nowhere with no money but the place had a challenge that if you could eat their big ass steak then you got it for free. They ate it alright. Lol

02/05/2016 - 20:38 |
0 | 0
Sean C

The Closest th ing I have to a horry story started two weeks ago. I was driving on the m4 from Hertfordshire to south wales. I heard a squeak coming from the right front, so I pulled over, called the AA he put some copper slip on the brake pad runners and I was on the road again in an hour He even said there was nothing to worry about. Two weeks later I was driving the other way (as I work and live most of the time in South Wales) and the same noise occurs on the m25, once I get closer it got even more serious. I was in no positions to stop for some time due to the lack of a hard shoulder, by this point I pulled off the motorway and stopped at a local garage (this was no more than 5 minutes) They had a look and said I needed new pads, caliper, disc, brake wear sensor. So from a minor squeak to a £540 job when you’re trying really hard to save for a car and a house is a big dent.

02/05/2016 - 20:49 |
0 | 0