Honestly there are roads more desolate than this one in the states. I used to live in Elko, NV and have family in Oregon. Past Winnemucca, NV. I always used to take 140 out of Nevada towards Burns, OR and Bend, OR cause 95 is sometimes patrolled... No one patrols out towards Denio. You could drive that for 2 and half hours and see 3-6 cars the entire trip. The bad thing, the creepy thing, is you can go 120mph and feel like you're going no where. It's surreal out on the salt flats. Between Winnemucca and Denio you can drive as fast as your car will go, and the mountains barely get larger minute to minute. It just feels like you're being completely still because the relative change in perspective is so imperceptible. There is nothing out there.
I used to live in Bridgeport, California and traveled a few times to Boise, Idaho for training. We took the road up to Yerington, to I-80, Winnemucca, Burns Junction, Jordan Valley and finally into the Snake River Valley. It was a long haul and we started well before sunrise, this mostly in the winter when we could take a break from the job and travel to training. I'm retired from the U.S. Forest Service and the training at the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise was among the best available. Boise was far warmer than Bridgeport and it was nice to experience that in the middle of the winter. From McDermitt to Burns Junction and through Jordan Valley is wonderfully remote and I always enjoyed the trips. Another interesting trip is to drive from Cedarville, California to Nevada State Route 140. This takes you on dirt roads through the Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge. I'm a bit of a connoisseur of remote country. I lived in two towns of less than 700 people for many years, Bridgeport, California and Magdalena, New Mexico. Both were on the edge of some remote country even though both were located on U.S. Highways. My definition of a remote place to live (by lower 48 state standards) means you are more than 10-20 miles from a place where you can buy gas, fresh milk, eggs, lettuce, bread, drop your elementary school kids at a bus stop and pick up and drop off mail. The 10-20 miles is dependent on what type of road provides access to this place, be it paved, gravel, dirt and whose road it is, state, county, Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service or National Park Service maintained. Often in these remote places your high school aged kids have to stay at a boarding school, which local school districts in remote areas run. My 1st wife taught at one of these.
I want to build a fantastic house here coz am fed up with my country. I want a silent and lonely environment. This place looks very good for me...Lots of Love from pakistan to the whole UNITED STATES.
SteelRazorBlade // AdamSRB Haven't driven in Scotland but have driven through North Wales and through Ireland which has great scenery and is really peaceful at places.
India is a really vast country but u can never find a lonely road as this,even in the most dense areas like rain forest if arunachal I don't think it might be this empty
Did you do it? This lamb has been on every mile of US 50 from Ocean City to Columbus. The worst part of that chunk is from US 219 in Garrett County to I-79 in Clarksburg. Slow, lots of sharp curves, steep hills, etc.
We really dislike this highway, if you drive faster than 75 MPH(which everyone does) a highway Patrol car will appear out of no where and if you are lucky you will get a warning. This highway pays their salary.
After watching a BUNCH of Western movies, and just hearing about the Pony Express station guy that was murdered in cold blood, all the horses stolen, it brings the reality of the pioneer's life in to focus. Besides that, I can't stand to eat dead animals or drink coffee and liquor, so I might go really really hungry. One guy wrote that he ate wolf soup. Yuck.
I remember driving with my parents through Bosnia in 2003 something like that over thr mountains where Manitu was filmed. There where some areas lonely like in this video or even lonelier.
I like it. I lived in Nevada for 20 years prior to moving. It is an interesting state even with all the difficulty of making a living there. Thank you for posting the video. I drove that route back in '98. From Ely to Reno. You have to take the time to appreciate the scenery miles you put in along your life way. :)
WOW , a lot of activity on that road for being " the loneliest road". Not too lonely. Now Oregon has some lonely roads. 100+ miles between towns with NO traffic ( Lakeview to Burns OR. 139 miles NO traffic -- None)
Yeah but does it have wide open plains like this, or is it mostly trees and mountains? The wide open, empty spaces are a big part of what make it feel so lonely. It's not just about numbers of people. It is also the psychological effect of having an unimpeded view to the horizon.
You really got to make sure your gas tank's full man. I got a little car sick, but this is a cool video for sure. My beautiful great aunt lived out her 100+ years in Lovelock Nevada. It really is beautiful country. 🎉❤
I think I counted about 80 vehicles in the opposite lane between Fallon and Austin, more than 100 miles, and many of them were traveling in groups of 2 or 3. Yikes, that's lonely all right! Fantastic fun to watch.
This is the single best timelapse drive I have ever seen. I love Nevada, the desolation, and the music you put to it. That was perfect. I used to watch a video of a guy driving the Dalton in Alaska set to a Roger Miller soundtrack, but this has it beat.
Hey, thank you very much for your incredible feedback. I'd recommend you take a look at Interstate Kyle - I love his videos. ruclips.net/channel/UC8Me_BMEW1k36Ap4xqNTapQ
I've actually started watching his videos in the last couple days, they are also very good. I also appreciated seeing a glimpse Sand Mountain out past Fallon, that would be a fun place to take my Banshee. I've recently come to love Nevada and its isolation and old ghost towns out in the middle of nowhere. I've had a Nevada road trip on my mind for a while now, where I would explore all the little used and forgotten state routes that crisscross the state. The climate in SW Idaho (my home) isn't much different, but Nevada is just more beautiful. This video kinda ignited that little fire in me, I've seen it many times.
this is your chance to eye-witness the visual equivalent of driving through NV on I-50 at 1800 m.p.h.; that is Mach 2.34. [I did the math!] Thank you Michael Adams for filming this. It's a delight. (wife and I are driving I-50 next week :-)
Many years ago, I did this drive, all the way from LA, back to Denver. --------It was gorgeous. You just have to be prepared,, & have supplies, in case. -------Listened to a novel on tape the whole way. -------------------WolfSky9, 72 y/o
The point of a speed limit is this.......... 45 MPH is 237,600 feet per hour or 66 feet per second. 60 MPH is 316,800 feet per hour or 88 feet per second. 75 MPH is 396,000 feet per hour or 110 feet per second. Now regardless of the possibility that someone might be coming in the opposite direction in a larger, heavier, sturdier vehicle would you rather lose control of your vehicle at 66 feet per second or 110 feet per second? In some stretches of this road you could regain control at 66 feet per second. In other stretches you couldn't. In many stretches of this road you can't do jack to stay on the road at 110 feet per second if you lose control for even 1 second. Now imagine that in some areas of this road you wouldn't see another human being for 10 - 20 minutes at a time during the daylight hours and you wouldn't see another human for hours at a time during the overnight hours. Even if the high beams on your vehicle work and you signal morse code distress calls to anyone that might be able to see your headlights, at 1AM the only vehicles that WOULD see your lights would be 31,000 feet up traveling at 500 MPH. By the time anyone acknowledges that you ran off the road, you (or someone else in your party) could be "hurtin' big time" for a LONG TIME into the future.
Thoroughly enjoyed your video of US Route 50. I drove the road yesterday. Two years ago I drove US Route 6 traveling from Yosemite National Park to Ely. US 6 is about 100 miles south of US 50 and both roads converge in Ely. In Ely, Nevada I saw t-shirts and Passport book promoting US Route 50 as "The Loneliest Highway in America". When I asked the hotel clerk in 2011 about Route 6, she replied, "It's even lonelier." US Route 6 is truly the lonelier and more remote highway than US 50.
Sassybumble. If you see circles in the dirt, it is where helicopters land, or if it is a crop... The sprinklers only move in circles. This was fun to watch because I'm a resident of Nevada but have never been that far down that Hywy.
wow....thanks for uploading. was debating taking a motorcycle on the 50 or the 80 across nevada. leaning on the 80 now, those are giant giant expanses of nothing and i have small gas tank.
Ahh! This is the exact same road I believe that CGP Grey drove Bailey Blue the Tesla through; his timelapse was like 3 hours long but that was for the whole trip of Silicon Valley-Moab-LA. Even then though his timelapse was considerably slower than this; even when it's sped up this fast some of those salt flats still take a good while to get across! Interesting to see how different his video looks to this; his videos had far better camera equipment and the weather was much different but even then it still seems like a few things have changed between this video and CGP Grey's roadtrip (2012 vs 2017) e.g. there are no solar and wind farms in this video but there were quite a few in CGP Grey's video.
You are right - they are crop circles - irrigation crop circles. Each one is an irrigated crop - the irrigation unit rotates around a central point. What's that got to do with this video ?
Something about lonely roads feel so great, but I haven't even experienced it yet and the closest I got is a 2 hour drive like 40 km (24 miles) and there was a long highway but with multiple cars and a few small houses and stores
Hi! I'm have to shoot a feature film on a very isolated road in a desert scenario... Route 50 looks very good for this. Can u tell me in which part I could find less traffic possible?
Peter, Here's something you can at least check for yourself............. Do a google search for "population density of _________________ by county" and type in the names of each U.S. state in the Mountain and Pacific time zones. Wikipedia definitely has that information on their website somewhere. Compare the populations and land areas of a lot of counties in at least 8 different states from Nebraska to Oregon. There are probably a number of roads in a few states that you might be able to use. For example, I know from fact that 6% of the population of Oregon is spread out across 54% of the land area of the state (basically every inch of land EAST of Rt. 97). Also Wyoming is the 2nd least populated state in the country while being the 5th largest state in the country. Do some searches of EVERY state in the entire Mountain and Pacific time zones. You'll be able to find someplace somewhere.
Yah the music is impossible to listen to. Had to mute it, but the video is great. What did you use to film it and edit? I'm planning on making a similar trip and was curious if you did a timelapse, or just video and compressed it with iMovie?
No, not a fan of the music either, but love how the dashed yellow road dividers seem to stay still while blasting down the highway. Thanks for bringing back memories (both good & bad) of road travel of a former Nevada resident! 2:13 LOL
A friend of mine made the video, all I did was upload it. I don't know what month he made the drive sorry. I no longer have the original video so I can't even look up the meta data file. I suspect he filmed it closer to Xmas time 2011 or early 2012. The train footage he shot at Ely had snow on the ground.
Drove this route at night. Kinda wish I'd had the views in the sunlight but there's something about driving in pitch black with nothing but static on all the radio stations.
Fuck no. I've driven through parts of Indiana on the expressway at night...nothing to light the night...would sure as hell never go on a stretch like the one you went on at night without knowing the terrain. Ponds and ditches can appear and you'd never know it until you are in them. No Thank You.
Great video. I love that area. :) Could you tell a few details about the filming? Which camera did you use? How did you mount the camera in the car? Thanks.
Hi Marko - A friend of mine filmed it - he uses a small Panasonic camera that would be about 4 years old by now I think. I'm not sure how he mounted it but he did take a tripod with him and I would guess that he just set it up in the car and used a couple of bungie cords to secure it - like I do. Sorry I'm not much help. Just give it a go and soon you'll find out what's best for you.
Honestly there are roads more desolate than this one in the states. I used to live in Elko, NV and have family in Oregon. Past Winnemucca, NV. I always used to take 140 out of Nevada towards Burns, OR and Bend, OR cause 95 is sometimes patrolled... No one patrols out towards Denio. You could drive that for 2 and half hours and see 3-6 cars the entire trip.
The bad thing, the creepy thing, is you can go 120mph and feel like you're going no where. It's surreal out on the salt flats. Between Winnemucca and Denio you can drive as fast as your car will go, and the mountains barely get larger minute to minute. It just feels like you're being completely still because the relative change in perspective is so imperceptible. There is nothing out there.
I've been out by Denio, there is NOTHING there. I also blew thru Frenchglen without slowing down, doing about 100. It's fun.
I used to live in Bridgeport, California and traveled a few times to Boise, Idaho for training. We took the road up to Yerington, to I-80, Winnemucca, Burns Junction, Jordan Valley and finally into the Snake River Valley. It was a long haul and we started well before sunrise, this mostly in the winter when we could take a break from the job and travel to training. I'm retired from the U.S. Forest Service and the training at the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise was among the best available. Boise was far warmer than Bridgeport and it was nice to experience that in the middle of the winter. From McDermitt to Burns Junction and through Jordan Valley is wonderfully remote and I always enjoyed the trips.
Another interesting trip is to drive from Cedarville, California to Nevada State Route 140. This takes you on dirt roads through the Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge. I'm a bit of a connoisseur of remote country. I lived in two towns of less than 700 people for many years, Bridgeport, California and Magdalena, New Mexico. Both were on the edge of some remote country even though both were located on U.S. Highways.
My definition of a remote place to live (by lower 48 state standards) means you are more than 10-20 miles from a place where you can buy gas, fresh milk, eggs, lettuce, bread, drop your elementary school kids at a bus stop and pick up and drop off mail. The 10-20 miles is dependent on what type of road provides access to this place, be it paved, gravel, dirt and whose road it is, state, county, Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service or National Park Service maintained. Often in these remote places your high school aged kids have to stay at a boarding school, which local school districts in remote areas run. My 1st wife taught at one of these.
I want to build a fantastic house here coz am fed up with my country. I want a silent and lonely environment. This place looks very good for me...Lots of Love from pakistan to the whole UNITED STATES.
@@pyrusrex2882 This road leads to INFINITY...
Not if you're doing 274mph in a Koenigsegg
If anyone plans on doing this, you'd better be driving a 70's muscle car while listening to the Doors, Riders on The Storm is recommended.
and Roadhouse Blues
Riders on the storm. There is a killer on the road
And Modest Mouse
I’ve done it several times in my E89 Z4. Doesn’t matter which song over 110mph. Can’t hear a thing. Just see the red mist.
Hell no, the loud engine roar irritates after a while
This is why I love America. You could never get this solitude in the UK. When I was in the US last year it was great being in the middle of nowhere.
Gary Howe Wales and Scotland you can. The mountain ranges are awesome. But I agree there's way more of this amazing scenery in the US.
SteelRazorBlade // AdamSRB Haven't driven in Scotland but have driven through North Wales and through Ireland which has great scenery and is really peaceful at places.
Try Canada
Have you been to the USA yet? It is beautiful!
England is a beautiful country. I'd LOVE to live there...
Just when I thought "well this is getting kind of rural looking" you came up on a flag man in the middle of nowhere. Cracked me up.
Great video. I drove Highway 50 from grand Junction, Colorado to Reno, Nevada in 1994. It wasn't just a trip. It was an experience. Loved it.
Imagine running out of gas
+guillermo prole I'd love to max out any car on this road but that;s my main fear. Conking out in the dead middle of the route
I bet theres a hermit or 2 around the middle of this long section that has an old gas station at 2x the regular price for those in need.
And imagine a trip on a motorcycle through here when you don't have a gas gauge, just have to estimate how many miles to empty.
ElHugger imagine your car or truck brock down and you had no signal had to call a tow truck rule1 bring extra fuel if your gonna go in the desert
Ouch!
Video is moving at 1653.45 mph. Cool.
No wonder I couldn't react in time at the corners. Thanks.
And then ur just stuck there and nobody else is out there to help you
I was watching this very intently and that traffic light in Fallon, NV about gave me a heart attack.
India is a really vast country but u can never find a lonely road as this,even in the most dense areas like rain forest if arunachal I don't think it might be this empty
I'm gonna do this next month .... from Maryland all the way to Sac ...
Did you do it? This lamb has been on every mile of US 50 from Ocean City to Columbus. The worst part of that chunk is from US 219 in Garrett County to I-79 in Clarksburg. Slow, lots of sharp curves, steep hills, etc.
Now? Lol
So did u do it?
We really dislike this highway, if you drive faster than 75 MPH(which everyone does) a highway Patrol car will appear out of no where and if you are lucky you will get a warning. This highway pays their salary.
5:05 speed limit 70 (slow it down to see)
Drove it several times. Wasn’t wasting no time. Never saw a cop. Did see 130 though.
thanks for the ride, I enjoyed it! I would love to ride my Harley on this road one of these days! its on my bucket list!!
One of the best things about there is the nighttime sky you can see stars and Stars and Stripes Forever
Could you imagine the pioneers coming across this on horse back and wagon. And with teenagers. OMG I'd be think'n what have I got myself into.
HAHA never thought of it that way :)
After watching a BUNCH of Western movies, and just hearing about the Pony Express station guy that was murdered in cold blood, all the horses stolen, it brings the reality of the pioneer's life in to focus. Besides that, I can't stand to eat dead animals or drink coffee and liquor, so I might go really really hungry. One guy wrote that he ate wolf soup. Yuck.
5:18 bathroom break lol
You caught that too
How the hell did you find that out? I couldn't notice it
I remember driving with my parents through Bosnia in 2003 something like that over thr mountains where Manitu was filmed. There where some areas lonely like in this video or even lonelier.
I like it. I lived in Nevada for 20 years prior to moving. It is an interesting state even with all the difficulty of making a living there. Thank you for posting the video. I drove that route back in '98. From Ely to Reno. You have to take the time to appreciate the scenery miles you put in along your life way. :)
WOW , a lot of activity on that road for being " the loneliest road". Not too lonely.
Now Oregon has some lonely roads. 100+ miles between towns with NO traffic ( Lakeview to Burns OR. 139 miles NO traffic -- None)
Yeah but does it have wide open plains like this, or is it mostly trees and mountains? The wide open, empty spaces are a big part of what make it feel so lonely. It's not just about numbers of people. It is also the psychological effect of having an unimpeded view to the horizon.
You really got to make sure your gas tank's full man. I got a little car sick, but this is a cool video for sure. My beautiful great aunt lived out her 100+ years in Lovelock Nevada. It really is beautiful country. 🎉❤
Watched it in 2x speed. It was one hell of a roller-coaster ride!
I think I counted about 80 vehicles in the opposite lane between Fallon and Austin, more than 100 miles, and many of them were traveling in groups of 2 or 3. Yikes, that's lonely all right! Fantastic fun to watch.
Wow, you were driving so fast you must own a Bugatti Chiron!
This is the single best timelapse drive I have ever seen. I love Nevada, the desolation, and the music you put to it. That was perfect. I used to watch a video of a guy driving the Dalton in Alaska set to a Roger Miller soundtrack, but this has it beat.
Hey, thank you very much for your incredible feedback. I'd recommend you take a look at Interstate Kyle - I love his videos. ruclips.net/channel/UC8Me_BMEW1k36Ap4xqNTapQ
I've actually started watching his videos in the last couple days, they are also very good. I also appreciated seeing a glimpse Sand Mountain out past Fallon, that would be a fun place to take my Banshee. I've recently come to love Nevada and its isolation and old ghost towns out in the middle of nowhere. I've had a Nevada road trip on my mind for a while now, where I would explore all the little used and forgotten state routes that crisscross the state. The climate in SW Idaho (my home) isn't much different, but Nevada is just more beautiful. This video kinda ignited that little fire in me, I've seen it many times.
So beautiful... I wanna go there once more, enjoy it more, just vast emptiness and relax
Very Nice! Been thinking about taking that route one of these days. Looks lonely, but also looks like you can add some speed too.
Route 50...I reckon you're safe if your intention is to bury someone
Find an old mine shaft quarter stick of dynamite it's gone forever just saying Iv never done it
Great video! I wrote new novels by reffering this video. Thank you! I've felt like I'm driving route 50!
Nice video, U.S.A is beautiful.
this is your chance to eye-witness the visual equivalent of driving through NV on I-50 at 1800 m.p.h.; that is Mach 2.34. [I did the math!] Thank you Michael Adams for filming this. It's a delight. (wife and I are driving I-50 next week :-)
Thanks a lot. I love Hwy 50, east of Fallon, especially at night. Now I can get my fix here, without hitting jackrabbits, thump thump.
...I liked the background music
You're about the only one that does mate !
I liked it. What was it?
So did I, and I'm picky. Though I will admit that this is the only soundtrack you've used that I liked.
@@mattallen8136 A tune by Head Jello.
Imagine having your car break down here
The horror, the horror.
eduardo ramirez breaks down during the night
I'm watching this for about the thousandth time. About 300 before I realized this goes right by sand mountain.
Many years ago, I did this drive, all the way from LA, back to Denver. --------It was gorgeous. You just have to be prepared,, & have supplies, in case. -------Listened to a novel on tape the whole way. -------------------WolfSky9, 72 y/o
What's the point of a speed limit? Lol
There is no speed limit there when I grew up there we drove as fast as we want to do fuck the police
Royal Allred people who say that are idiots
The point of a speed limit is this..........
45 MPH is 237,600 feet per hour or 66 feet per second.
60 MPH is 316,800 feet per hour or 88 feet per second.
75 MPH is 396,000 feet per hour or 110 feet per second.
Now regardless of the possibility that someone might be coming in the opposite direction in a larger, heavier, sturdier vehicle would you rather lose control of your vehicle at 66 feet per second or 110 feet per second?
In some stretches of this road you could regain control at 66 feet per second. In other stretches you couldn't. In many stretches of this road you can't do jack to stay on the road at 110 feet per second if you lose control for even 1 second.
Now imagine that in some areas of this road you wouldn't see another human being for 10 - 20 minutes at a time during the daylight hours and you wouldn't see another human for hours at a time during the overnight hours.
Even if the high beams on your vehicle work and you signal morse code distress calls to anyone that might be able to see your headlights, at 1AM the only vehicles that WOULD see your lights would be 31,000 feet up traveling at 500 MPH.
By the time anyone acknowledges that you ran off the road, you (or someone else in your party) could be "hurtin' big time" for a LONG TIME into the future.
@@alexandra.willitts6988 you're no fun
This is epic! Bucket list drive for me.
Thoroughly enjoyed your video of US Route 50.
I drove the road yesterday.
Two years ago I drove US Route 6 traveling from Yosemite National Park to Ely. US 6 is about 100 miles south of US 50 and both roads converge in Ely.
In Ely, Nevada I saw t-shirts and Passport book promoting US Route 50 as "The Loneliest Highway in America". When I asked the hotel clerk in 2011 about Route 6, she replied, "It's even lonelier."
US Route 6 is truly the lonelier and more remote highway than US 50.
Good Job! Your time laps is the best that i have seen so far.
Just look at this big blue sky... It must feel like flying in this road...
Damn, people in Nevada really do be driving fast tho
Sassybumble. If you see circles in the dirt, it is where helicopters land, or if it is a crop... The sprinklers only move in circles. This was fun to watch because I'm a resident of Nevada but have never been that far down that Hywy.
Great video. Hypnotic.
This is seriously in the top 10 best videos on youtube...damnit I wish I didn't live so far away!
Seriously ? I wish I could take credit for filming it. It now features as bonus footage in a DVD I produce. Looks good in HD on a big screen.
Thanks for uploading, mate.
wow....thanks for uploading. was debating taking a motorcycle on the 50 or the 80 across nevada. leaning on the 80 now, those are giant giant expanses of nothing and i have small gas tank.
that's an awesome video. I did this drive going East like the video Nov 2, 2014 in my mustang. It looked crystal clear just like this video.
ok... thanks for the vid. In Reno now and thinking about using it tomorrow to get to Utah. Trying to avoid going north via WY?oming.
You drive really fast. Cheers!
Great video! Reminds me of Knight Rider
Ahh! This is the exact same road I believe that CGP Grey drove Bailey Blue the Tesla through; his timelapse was like 3 hours long but that was for the whole trip of Silicon Valley-Moab-LA. Even then though his timelapse was considerably slower than this; even when it's sped up this fast some of those salt flats still take a good while to get across! Interesting to see how different his video looks to this; his videos had far better camera equipment and the weather was much different but even then it still seems like a few things have changed between this video and CGP Grey's roadtrip (2012 vs 2017) e.g. there are no solar and wind farms in this video but there were quite a few in CGP Grey's video.
No small wonder it's called the loneliest highway 🤔😱🤨🥴🙏🤣 . PS, I was feeling that music. good choice 👍👌😉
I took this trip in my RV going the opposite direction on my way to Burning Man. Thanks for the Memories!
Nite driving is like OMG??????
Yes...proved it ....it is lonely and beautiful as its scary. Wow route 50.💝💝😘😘😘😘😘😍😍😍😍😘😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
The famous photo at 5:05? I look forward to driving on this road going west sometime.
I bet you were thinking about the one with a McLaren P1, with the UK plate P1 OOV, shot at night.
This is a nice time-lapse video. Wow, I'd really like to go to United States! Video liked!
You are right - they are crop circles - irrigation crop circles. Each one is an irrigated crop - the irrigation unit rotates around a central point. What's that got to do with this video ?
Yesterday marked the 10th year of this video.
Thanks for reminding me how much I've aged...
@@ejvideos07 your welcome
Couldn't you just go full speed at these roads?
Nice, that saves me a trip 👌
I like the music, it reminds me of Top Gear's music (the racing game)
Something about lonely roads feel so great, but I haven't even experienced it yet and the closest I got is a 2 hour drive like 40 km (24 miles) and there was a long highway but with multiple cars and a few small houses and stores
Did it on my Harley. Awesome road trip.
Nice video. Thanks for posting.
Hi! I'm have to shoot a feature film on a very isolated road in a desert scenario... Route 50 looks very good for this. Can u tell me in which part I could find less traffic possible?
Sorry I don't know - I don't live in the USA. This video was filmed by a friend of mine.
Peter,
Here's something you can at least check for yourself............. Do a google search for "population density of _________________ by county" and type in the names of each U.S. state in the Mountain and Pacific time zones.
Wikipedia definitely has that information on their website somewhere.
Compare the populations and land areas of a lot of counties in at least 8 different states from Nebraska to Oregon. There are probably a number of roads in a few states that you might be able to use.
For example, I know from fact that 6% of the population of Oregon is spread out across 54% of the land area of the state (basically every inch of land EAST of Rt. 97).
Also Wyoming is the 2nd least populated state in the country while being the 5th largest state in the country.
Do some searches of EVERY state in the entire Mountain and Pacific time zones. You'll be able to find someplace somewhere.
nice road with not too many people on it! I'm from nj I can't comprehend it.Also nice video.
Very cool video
The hills have eyes
Pill Cosby what did you smoke? Pills? What pills did you take P I L L cosby?
Are there alot of pull off area's? Taking this trip on my bucketlist adventures tour on a bicycle.....
I’m seriously considering taking this trip on my next vacation.
Ok, the music... not so much...
Thanks for the vid! I'm gonna be that way soon. What did you use to shoot the trip?
I liked it
Great Job!! I will be traveling this next month and was wondering what the drive was like. I've taken 80 from SLC to Reno.
That's crazy, my family used to live a couple blocks from the McDonald's and I went to school next to the Jack and the Box at :58 at the light.
You even call roads with only one lane per direction a "highway" over there? What's the speed limit?
Mostly 70 mph. (110 km/h)
Yah the music is impossible to listen to. Had to mute it, but the video is great. What did you use to film it and edit? I'm planning on making a similar trip and was curious if you did a timelapse, or just video and compressed it with iMovie?
Video camera, tripod, filmed the whole trip then sped it up.
How many miles is that ?
I watched this video while listening to Dark Train by Underworld, its simply incredible.
I like when viewers suggest better music, rather than grizzle about the royalty free piece I put with this. Thank you.
What's the speed limit on that thing? These long straights jsut scream for some released horse powers :)
That was cool. I was on that road a few years ago but there was more snow on the ground. It IS a very long drive.
how can you NOT go 100+ mph on stretches like 5:30
great video, thanks for sharing!!
Never been to the States. Nor have I travelled this far by car cause in my country.. It only takes an hour to travel across. Cool vid!
No need. I find the loneliest place in the world when I close my eyes
That. Was. Beautiful. ._.
Amy and Roger's epic detour brought me here 😊
any gas stations in between ??
how long is this road ..?? in miles
Sorry - don't know. A friend of mine filmed this, I just put it to music, added subtitles and uploaded it, so I don't know how fast he was driving.
awesome, i love it and music was great
No, not a fan of the music either, but love how the dashed yellow road dividers seem to stay still while blasting down the highway. Thanks for bringing back memories (both good & bad) of road travel of a former Nevada resident! 2:13 LOL
The Mute button is your friend.
Awesome video, I love every second of it!
great video i love roads and cross them !
@Mike Adams , what was the total mileage you drove in the time lapse??
goo.gl/maps/iTXcbq89RQ22
I was surprised to see so many other vehicles along the way. Is it generally a busy route?
+DUB FRED I don't think so. The video is sped up a lot, giving the impression that there is more traffic than there really is.
What month of the year did you actually make this drive ? I see you posted it Oct 2012
A friend of mine made the video, all I did was upload it. I don't know what month he made the drive sorry. I no longer have the original video so I can't even look up the meta data file. I suspect he filmed it closer to Xmas time 2011 or early 2012. The train footage he shot at Ely had snow on the ground.
Thanks
Been there, drove that, and it was very cool!
Drove this route at night. Kinda wish I'd had the views in the sunlight but there's something about driving in pitch black with nothing but static on all the radio stations.
Fuck no. I've driven through parts of Indiana on the expressway at night...nothing to light the night...would sure as hell never go on a stretch like the one you went on at night without knowing the terrain. Ponds and ditches can appear and you'd never know it until you are in them. No Thank You.
Great video. I love that area. :)
Could you tell a few details about the filming? Which camera did you use? How did you mount the camera in the car? Thanks.
Hi Marko - A friend of mine filmed it - he uses a small Panasonic camera that would be about 4 years old by now I think. I'm not sure how he mounted it but he did take a tripod with him and I would guess that he just set it up in the car and used a couple of bungie cords to secure it - like I do. Sorry I'm not much help. Just give it a go and soon you'll find out what's best for you.
Are there tumbleweeds on that highway?
what a great video!! amazing!
They're not timelapse photos - it's continuous video that's been sped up - lots. Filmed with a 1080-50p camera.