Land's End to John o'Groats
Land's End to John o'Groats
Author
Discussion

S. Gonzales Esq.

Original Poster:

2,559 posts

228 months

Tuesday 8th January 2013
quotequote all
There's something appealing about the idea of the longest possible journey on the Mainland, but before taking it on I'm interested in hearing about the experiences of others who've made the trip - either up or down.

Did you do it in one hit sticking to Motorways all the way, or meander along using exclusively B-roads?

How long did it take? Several days, or less than 12 hours like this guy on a turbocharged Kawasaki?

Finally, how much better economy would I get driving downhill from Scotland rather than uphill from Cornwall?

SmilerFTM

832 posts

166 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
S. Gonzales Esq. said:
Finally, how much better economy would I get driving downhill from Scotland rather than uphill from Cornwall?
I'm hoping (in vain) that is a serious question silly

quiraing

1,649 posts

155 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
On a nice sunny day with no wind, the force of gravity-pull towards the equator obviously allows greater economy if you start from John o Groats. Especially if you load your pockets up with magnets. And it's all downhill too from the top of Scotland to Cornwall.

But check forecasted wind direction first before you leave. Strong northerly winds would contribute to economy if you start instead from Cornwall and choose a tall square vehicle such as an artic lorry.









Edited by quiraing on Wednesday 9th January 07:27

Laurel Green

30,934 posts

248 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
Yup, but took me a week. That said, I used A and B roads wherever possible and was more of an around Britain starting at Land's End, across Wales, up the west coast and across the top to John O'Groats - most enjoyable!

ETA: There's a few threads on this topic, one of such is Here.

Edited by Laurel Green on Wednesday 9th January 09:54

S. Gonzales Esq.

Original Poster:

2,559 posts

228 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
Thanks for the replies - good tip about the magnets too.

I hadn't spotted the BB thread on my Google searches so will give it a read - I'm afraid I gave up on the PH search function a while ago.

Laurel Green

30,934 posts

248 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
S. Gonzales Esq. said:
Thanks for the replies - good tip about the magnets too.

I hadn't spotted the BB thread on my Google searches so will give it a read - I'm afraid I gave up on the PH search function a while ago.
As have I; type into Google 'Pitonheads + search requirements' without the plus sign wink and there's a fair chance that all will be revealed. thumbup

Hooli

32,278 posts

216 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
S. Gonzales Esq. said:
Finally, how much better economy would I get driving downhill from Scotland rather than uphill from Cornwall?
It won't help. You've got to drive uphill to JoG to get there in the first place wink

madbadger

11,667 posts

260 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
Laurel Green said:
S. Gonzales Esq. said:
Thanks for the replies - good tip about the magnets too.

I hadn't spotted the BB thread on my Google searches so will give it a read - I'm afraid I gave up on the PH search function a while ago.
As have I; type into Google 'Pitonheads + search requirements' without the plus sign wink and there's a fair chance that all will be revealed. thumbup
Pitonheads. Mountaineering accessories matter.

Edited by madbadger on Wednesday 9th January 15:31

Mostro

727 posts

223 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
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laugh LOL at all of this thread

scratchchin

Snowboy

8,028 posts

167 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
Google maps tells me 14 hours and 20 minutes.
That's without breaking any speed limits.

I'm sure there's a few recognised good driving routes that have nice A roads and good viewpoints.

Bearing in mind you have to get ghere first, then get back, it might be better to do a big curcuit from home all the way round.

Lee540

1,586 posts

160 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
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I live not far from Lands End, about 15 miles away.. I thought about the trip but can't be bothered.. once get to Scotland, I will have to drive back!

JM

3,170 posts

222 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
S. Gonzales Esq. said:
Did you do it in one hit sticking to Motorways all the way, or meander along using exclusively B-roads?
It's be impossible to do it going by either exclusively Motorways or exclusively B roads.

I've never really thought about doing it, mostly because the thought of driving the length of England twice on busy roads and in traffic jams doesn't appeal to me.

Laurel Green

30,934 posts

248 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
madbadger said:
Pitonheads. Mountaineering accessories matter.
Took me a while, did that. hehe

Laurel Green

30,934 posts

248 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
JM said:
I've never really thought about doing it, mostly because the thought of driving the length of England twice on busy roads and in traffic jams doesn't appeal to me.
I did it in the last week of April, never see a jam at all. Mind, as said, I took a week so there was never going to be any time constraints re traffic.

Synchromesh

2,428 posts

182 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
Your 306 D-turbo has a 60 litre fuel tank, equating to 13.2 gallons. Taking the fastest route avoiding motorways (you may as well stick to the fun stuff) between LE and JoG is 906 miles. So if you manage 68.6 mpg, you can do it on one tank. Reckon you could that while beating the google maps estimated driving time (not necessarily in one slog though!)?

S2Mike

3,065 posts

166 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
How about doing the Top Gear Clarkson one with the Jag, West to East, not necessarily over night to beat the sun.but daylight blast.
Not so far to the start, unless you live at one of the extreme North or Southerly places, and you can easily avoid Motorways, going cross country.
Im thinking along these lines myself.

dcb

5,990 posts

281 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
JM said:
I've never really thought about doing it, mostly because the thought of driving the length of England twice on busy roads and in traffic jams doesn't appeal to me.
LE to JoG is much more than the length of England: there's
Scotland to consider too as well as getting from home
to the starting point and from the end point back to home.

I'm an keen driver, but a 1,700 mile round trip in the UK doesn't appeal at all.
I think I'd rather watch paint dry than spend that amount of time on UK roads.

This from someone who will happily do 2,000 miles in a week going from the UK to the Alps and back.


Ekona

1,682 posts

218 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
I did it in 2011, in one day. Took about 13.5 hours, just set the sat nav for shortest route and away I went smile

Motorway in the UK, then it al gets good when you're past Glasgow. Amazing trip, genuinely loved every second of it and it's a good story to tell. Not many people do LEJOG in the one day.

S. Gonzales Esq.

Original Poster:

2,559 posts

228 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
S2Mike said:
How about doing the Top Gear Clarkson one with the Jag, West to East, not necessarily over night to beat the sun.but daylight blast.
Not so far to the start, unless you live at one of the extreme North or Southerly places, and you can easily avoid Motorways, going cross country.
Im thinking along these lines myself.
Actual did something very similar last year. A friend and I went from the most Westerly point in Wales to the most Easterly point in England, overnight on the shortest night of the year.

The Clarkson option of Land's End to Lowestoft seemed a bit lacking in challenge, being largely motorway or DC. Instead we did our cross-country run on A and B-roads only, managed an average of sixty-something and actually got there half an hour ahead of schedule.

S. Gonzales Esq.

Original Poster:

2,559 posts

228 months

Wednesday 9th January 2013
quotequote all
Synchromesh said:
Your 306 D-turbo has a 60 litre fuel tank, equating to 13.2 gallons. Taking the fastest route avoiding motorways (you may as well stick to the fun stuff) between LE and JoG is 906 miles. So if you manage 68.6 mpg, you can do it on one tank. Reckon you could that while beating the google maps estimated driving time (not necessarily in one slog though!)?
Unfortunately 'fun stuff' and 68.6 mpg are mutually exclusive, even if I did once get 67mpg out of the Peugeot.

I'm wondering about how much it'll cost in the BMW - by the time I've come back the pretty way through Scotland it'll be over 2000 miles in total, and at 25mpg that could be quite a commitment.