The red dust of the Oodnadatta Track was still settling on our helmets when Ms Petrova said what we were all thinking: “I didn’t expect to feel this emotional about a piece of machinery.” We were seven days into a 4,200-kilometer crossing of the Australian continent—Darwin to Adelaide via the Stuart Highway’s roughest parallel tracks—and our convoy of three ATV vehicles-equipped Nomader Hybrid Pros had become something more than transportation. They had become the sixth member of a team that started as five strangers and a guide. This is the story of what happens when you push vehicles and friendships to their limits across one of the world’s most unforgiving landscapes.
The team assembled in Darwin on a Monday morning in June—dry season, mercifully, with daytime temperatures hovering around 32°C instead of the wet season’s suffocating 42. Captain O’Brien, our expedition leader, had been running overland trips across Australia for seventeen years. Mr Tan, a Singaporean photographer who had never driven anything larger than a scooter. Dr Mensah, a Ghanaian-born geologist who knew more about the rock formations we’d traverse than anyone alive. Ms Fitzgerald, a cattle station manager from Queensland who could rebuild an engine with a Leatherman and a prayer. And me—the logistics planner who somehow convinced everyone this was a good idea. Six very different humans. Three identical machines. One continent.
Captain O’Brien: “Right then. Fuel stops every 350 kilometers regardless of what the gauges say. Radios on channel 14. And if you see a road train coming the other way, you pull off, you stop, and you wait. Those things don’t brake for anyone—not even for three of the best side-by-sides I’ve ever run.”
Mr Tan: “How much dust should I expect inside the cabin?”
Captain O’Brien: “All of it, mate. All of it.”
The Track That Tests Everything
The first three days were the easy part—relatively speaking. Sealed roads north of Alice Springs, breaking in the vehicles at cruising speeds, learning each other’s rhythms. Mr Tan discovered that the Nomader’s cabin filtration system actually kept out about 80% of the bulldust, which he documented with the enthusiasm of someone reviewing a five-star hotel. Dr Mensah gave impromptu geology lectures at every fuel stop, pointing out the bands of iron oxide that painted the MacDonnell Ranges in streaks of ochre and crimson. Ms Fitzgerald silently checked tire pressures and fluid levels every morning before anyone else was awake—a ranch habit, she explained, that had saved more cattle station vehicles than she could count.
The expedition’s character changed on Day 4 when we turned off the bitumen onto the Binns Track—470 kilometers of corrugations, creek crossings, and the kind of terrain that separates adventure vehicles from grocery-getters. The corrugations on the Sandover Highway section were brutal: repetitive impacts at 15-20 Hz that rattle fillings loose and shake bolts out of their threads. We’d been warned that most side-by-sides lose at least one accessory mount on this stretch. The Nomaders lost nothing. Not so much as a loose mirror. Ms Fitzgerald, who had been skeptical of the factory suspension tuning, admitted she was impressed.
Ms Fitzgerald: “I’ve run Polaris Rangers on the station for years. They’d have shed half their bolt-ons by kilometer forty of this track. These things are just… absorbing it. I can feel the suspension working but the chassis isn’t transmitting it. That’s proper damping, not just spring rate.”
Dr Mensah: “The geology under us right now is approximately 1.8 billion years old. Your suspension components are handling stresses that these rocks have been dealing with for roughly two percent of Earth’s history. Perspective, Ms Fitzgerald.”
Ms Fitzgerald: “The rocks aren’t the ones I’m worried about breaking, Doctor.”
The Crossing That Changed Everything
The defining moment came on Day 9, attempting the Finke River crossing—normally a dry sandy bed, but swollen that week from unseasonal rains in the catchment. The water was running knee-deep and fast, and the far bank was a steep, muddy climb that looked significantly more intimidating from the driver’s seat than it had on the satellite imagery. Captain O’Brien walked the crossing first, probing the bottom with a pole, then gave us the briefing: low range, steady throttle, do not lift, and if anyone got stuck, the recovery protocol was already rehearsed.
Mr Tan went first—the least experienced driver, but also the lightest vehicle load. He made it across with water splashing over the hood but wheels never losing traction. Ms Fitzgerald followed, her Nomader’s extra weight from recovery gear actually helping with the riverbed grip. I crossed third, and Dr Mensah captured the whole thing on video from the safety of the far bank, narrating the hydrological characteristics of the Finke River system while the rest of us tried to remember how to breathe. Three vehicles. Three crossings. Zero recoveries required. The Smart Rider app on our phones confirmed what our adrenaline was telling us: the vehicles’ traction control had intervened precisely when needed, distributing torque to the wheels with grip while cutting power to the ones spinning in the mud.
| Day | Segment | Distance | Terrain | Key Challenge |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-3 | Darwin → Alice Springs | 1,500 km | Sealed highway | Vehicle break-in, team bonding |
| 4-7 | Binns Track (north) | 740 km | Corrugations, creek beds | Endless corrugations, isolation |
| 8-10 | Finke River → Simpson Desert fringe | 620 km | Sand, river crossings | Finke River crossing, deep sand |
| 11-14 | Oodnadatta Track → Adelaide | 1,340 km | Mixed gravel, sealed | Fatigue management, final push |

By Day 14, rolling into Adelaide with red dust in places red dust had no business being, the six of us had become something that fourteen days and four thousand kilometers of shared hardship creates. We’d swapped driving duties, shared meals cooked on tailgate grills, and learned each other’s life stories in the gaps between navigational waypoints. Mr Tan had taken over 8,000 photographs. Dr Mensah had collected seventeen rock samples that customs would later confiscate. Ms Fitzgerald had not found a single thing to complain about on the vehicles, which she declared was a first in her thirty years of operating off-road equipment. And Captain O’Brien, the man who had seen everything the outback could throw at a vehicle, concluded the trip with the highest compliment an expedition leader can give.
Captain O’Brien: “In seventeen years of running these crossings, I’ve never had a trip with zero mechanical delays. Not one. Until this one. Whatever they’re building into these machines—keep building it.”
Three Nomaders. Six riders. Fourteen days. And a continent that, for two weeks, felt like it belonged entirely to us.
What the trip statistics do not convey is how the three Nomaders performed in distinctly different roles across the same expedition. The lead vehicle, a Nomader 850, carried the navigation equipment and two riders, averaging 14.2 liters per 100 kilometers across the entire crossing. The middle vehicle, a Nomader Hybrid Pro, served as the supply carrier with approximately 180 kilograms of food, water, and camping gear, and its hybrid system delivered a 19% fuel consumption advantage over the lead vehicle despite carrying nearly double the payload. The trailing vehicle, a Nomader 580, functioned as the mechanical support unit carrying tools, spare parts, and emergency supplies, and its lighter weight proved invaluable in the soft sand sections where heavier vehicles were prone to bogging. This three-vehicle configuration — different models playing complementary roles — is increasingly how professional expedition teams are structuring their SWM fleet purchases: a mix of platforms selected for specific mission profiles rather than a uniform fleet of identical units. The Australian crossing demonstrated that the three Nomader models share enough parts commonality to simplify logistics while offering enough capability differentiation to justify the multi-model approach. Every expedition that returns with this kind of operational data makes SWM’s fleet sales proposition more credible.

