My first night in the Pontiac Aztek was pretty rough. The wind was blowing the tent all over the place — it was loud, it was cold, and my back was the shape of a pretzel by the time I woke up.
I’m finally delivering my end of the “If 200 People Become Autopian Members In April I Will Purchase A Pontiac Aztek, Daily-Drive It For A Month, And Live In It” deal. As I wrote in my article “Our Pontiac Aztek Has Been A Great Daily Driver Except For One Major Issue: Unintended Acceleration,” Daily-driving the Aztek was really not a huge deal, partly because I don’t go to the office everyday, and partly because the Aztek is in great condition. Honestly, for us to have scored it for only $3604 is just the deal of the century.
The unintended acceleration thing, though, is becoming more and more of a problem.
I still haven’t quite figured out what’s going on here, because sometimes the engine revs up, and sometimes it doesn’t. It seems random, and with it comes really rough shifting. I’m worried this transmission is going to grenade itself if I don’t find a fix soon, though as of this moment, the engine idles at a steady 800 RPM, the transmission shifts in a buttery fashion, and the car seems fine. As I said, it’s random.
Anyway, on Monday I began part two of our deal: Sleeping in the Aztent, and I have to admit, my first impressions weren’t great. The tent didn’t seem sturdy, and the vehicle’s rear cargo area fails the number one test for sleep-ability: it’s not even close to flat.
Seriously, look at this floor — it’s not just the rear cargo area trim:
It’s not just the gap and the slippery, sloped tailgate:
But the floor itself is actually far from flat for some reason:
As you can see in the clip above, I didn’t use the old tent I’d purchased from Facebook Marketplace, but rather a brand spankin’ new tent that a generous reader had sold me in a piping hot deal. Just look at this minty-fresh unit:
I followed the never-before-read instructions, which really answered a lot of questions I had about which hooks go where.
The short of it is, the tent involves you hooking two straps to the garment hooks, and closing the rear doors on those straps.
There are two additional hooks near the tailgate; those get fastened down around the wheel well. Normally, you’re not supposed to hook the front one to the wheel, but I didn’t want to stretch this minty tent. It’s a historical artifact, valuable to possibly multiple people!
I had been a bit hasty on night one. I set up the tent and just crashed on a really thin mattress pad there in that work parking lot. You can see the setup above; obviously, it’s not doing much to “flatten” out that big hump in the cargo area (hence my back ending up as a pretzel). I also forgot to put on my wool socks, so I woke up freezing my arse off (top tip after far too many subzero camping trips: Even if you don’t normally sleep in socks, if you’re camping in cold temps, throw some thick socks on).
Anyway, I woke up looking rough:
I did a bit of blogging, then needed to use the bathroom, so I headed towards the office wearing my pajamas before realizing it was Tuesday, so there was a big department-wide meeting happening right on the other side of the door. Thank god I realized that, or that’d have been awkward.
Night two took place in my fiancee’s parents’ driveway. Temperatures didn’t seem as cold on Tuesdsay night, Elise (Not Her Real Name)’s mom had given me a nice warm blanket and a sweet lantern, and I awoke to some chirping birds, so the whole thing was actually quite pleasant:
Notice how I look at least 20 percent less miserable:
Here’s Elise (Not Her Real Name)’s dad, whom I’m excited to soon call my father in law, standing next to my Aztek:
Night two had actually changed my mind about the Aztek. The spine-in-the-shape-of-a-pretzel thing is still an issue, but that can be solved by the official Pontiac Aztek air mattress, which I’ll be deploying this evening.
As for the wind noise, I think that’s just a product of me not staking down the back of the tent, since I’m parking in driveways. There are loops on the tent, which came with strings and stakes, so if I were to actually park this thing on some dirt, much of the noise/instability would go away.
More importantly, setting this thing up is just so easy — even alone:
What’s more, there’s just so much cool storage in the back:
Plus there’s a 12-volt outlet for you to charge your phone:
And the rear window sills are nice and flat, acting as great nightstands:
That first night in the work parking lot had me skeptical that maybe the Aztent was just a gimmick, but actually, I’m now 100 percent onboard. Look at how tight the tent fits:
With an air mattress, this actually has potential to be a legitimately good camping setup — offering elevation and setup-speed over a ground tent, and offering extra legroom/ventilation over just sleeping in a mid-size SUV.
Check out our Instagram to follow along. Tonight I plan to inflate the brand-new air mattress for the first time ever, and I’m planning on cooking a meal on a propane stove…somewhere. Probably along the coast somewhere.
I’m beginning to think Elise isn’t her real name.
Or David’s playing some real 3D chess here
Elise (not her real name): “Daddy, meet my fiancé David”
Elise (not her real name)‘s dad: “Nice to meet you son. You look a little tired.”
David: “Yeah, I just woke up after sleeping in a car in your driveway.”
Elise (not her real name)‘s dad: blank stare
David: “Can I use your shower?”
Elise (not her real name)‘s dad: “Ok, I suppose. Top of the stairs, take a right. You need anything?”
David: “Do you have any spaghetti?”
Elise (not her real name)’s dad: “Elise (not her real name), a word with you in the den, please?”
I’d pay to see this movie again.
possibly unrelated? I had a 1988 Beretta. I loved it.
I had maaaaaajor throttle cable problems multiple times. Once, the throttle had a sort of stop in the middle of it. You’d have to really push through to get acceleration, and then it looked like you were racing at every stop sign.
Or, it wouldn’t work well at all, and would require hard pressure to advance even a tiny bit, though you could do so gradually.
My fog-addled sub-20-year-old memory tells me that a) there may have been a TSB for it, because we took it to a dealer, who sprayed some sort of shenanigans down the cable, and that worked for a while, until it happened again…and we got a new cable out of it the second time.
I vaguely remember GM throttle cables being doo doo.
GM cheaps out on way too many parts. Quality and safety first, not profits and corner-cutting.
My idea of “camping” is a hotel with slow room service. No thanks.
But congrats on your impending nuptials with Miss Not Her Real Name! I’d like to meet the woman who wants to spend the rest of her life (or at least until the divorce) with the cool crazy rusty Jeep guy.
Take it to an overland event, take it actually camping. Being in a driveway isnt it. Going out to the woods or desert disconnected from the world is a great experience. I do it a few times a year off the motorcycle. Its a great way to recharge.
It’s Friday Friday night. Grab a bottle of wine, ingredients for smores, some strawberries, and you’ll be able to test out how the Aztek really “sleeps”. I’m looking forward to seeing the official air mattress for it.
Masochism not on my diet, thanks. Look it up.
It’s always funny to me how “camping” looks and feels depending on the locale. Same car, same tent, same bed. In a Walmart parking lot? Sad and desperate. On the edge of a lake in the woods? Amazing and cool.
Hey! The promise was purchase Aztec and live in it. We’re seeing the sleep in it (thank you) but what about preparing meals, running a website, entertaining friends, and doing laundry in it?
Ok then, You try living in one for a month and see how impossible it would be.
But Bosco didn’t take people’s money on the premise of livinging in it like David did.
The Aztek doesn’t have plumbing so he’s got to go somewhere to ‘do business’…he can’t be in it 24/7!
Some empty gatorade bottles and a kitty litter bucket or Luggable Loo would solve that problem.
eewwwww. I signed up for the cheap membership so I’m willing to give him a pass. Let the man use a real bathroom and have a little dignity
Until it gets full on day 4.
Find a McDonalds outdoor garbage can and throw it away. Freshen that up.
That tent looks like an overloaded diaper on the Aztek.
Neverminding what comes out of it 😉
Camping outside your in-laws, eh?
Reminds me of the time I locked my keys and phone inside my car, while waiting for my then-girlfriend to return home.
It was a chilly November night, I had no choice but to take refuge inside her parent’s BBQ cover.
3/4″ sheet of plywood. cut to fit so you get a flat surface, then the pad or air mattress, both work better on a flat surface- than the undulations by the Pontiac
“Undulations by Pontiac” is the name of my syth-funk band
An air mattress is fancy. When I lived in my car I flattened it out by using my laundry.
Clean stuff can be a decent pillow too.
Not without the soothing stench of well-used underware. Ok, I’ll see myself out.
Just read the warnings on the Aztek tent instructions. I knew that engines get very hot but I didn’t realize they could cause “sever” burns. I would hate to lose a limb because I was too impatient to let things cool down.
Anakin Skywalker is the rolling poster child of sever burns.
Makes sense he’d be rolling, he ain’t got no legs!
I think I’m late but if still looking for a place by the water there is a good camp ground off hwy 1 in Ventura.
https://www.campingadventuresrentals.com/destination/point-mugu-sycamore-canyon-ventura/
the beach side wasn’t as noisy as I thought it would be. the canyon side is great.
Not her real name? That is an odd family name. Is that sweedish?
Azwrecked. I see what you did there
Regarding the revving, my F150 was doing something similar. The transmission output shaft speed sensor was acting flaky, and when it wasn’t registering properly, the computer got confused and I got the revving engine and rough shifts. It started with short, intermittent episodes and got progressively worse.
Just a thought.
I had a similar thought. It sounds like a sensor/system with a dodgy connection. Not that big of a deal if you know exactly what bespoke, brittle, stabby molex connection to break apart.
David, as a fellow Aztek owner I have to say that you’ve got your set up wrong! You have to pull the rear seats out. As soon as you do that you’ll find the Aztek air mattress fits perfectly between the front seats and the spine breaking hump.
Mine has the cargo tray, which *almost lines up with the folded rear seats to create platform. Removing the seats (and cargo tray in my case) is really the only way to go!
GM 60° V6? IAC/ crusty TB. Also, get some sleeping outside tips from the folks on skid row. They seem to have it down!
I have to wonder whate Elise’s, not her real name parents think of their daughters fiance sleeping in an CUV not only in a parking lot but their driveway. Most parents in law would frown upon it.
Looking at the prospective father in law, he’s all aboard the David Traincy.
He owns his own successful business, hob nobs with Jay Leno, and is a wheelbarrow shrimp connoisseur. Any parent in law would be proud to call a guy like that “son”.
Do not forget shower spaghetti aficinado
This is a smart move on David’s part. Better to stress-test the fiancée and her family before the wedding to make sure they are OK with the real Tracy experience. Looks like all parties passed the test!
Those weren’t chirping birds. They were vultures wondering if you were dead yet.
I am curious about the lack of effort to cure the uncommanded acceleration issue; that should not be a very difficult issue to sort out.
Has anyone even hooked a scan tool to it to see what it is doing?
Is the target RPM moving or is it uncommanded by the ECM as well?
This looks like a much better camping setup than others you shared with us – at least this time you’re not bathing in the Baltic and losing your glasses!
I spent Sunday and Monday night sleeping in a glamorous hotel with a cocktail bar in Bayswater, and the days since in my own big comfy double bed with a nice warm fluffy blanket.
So getting you to sleep in the aztec is next years fundraising goal?
I’ll sign up to read that.
The way to really increase membership would be to make Adrian’s UNCENSORED comments accessible to members only.
I’d get into debt paying for that.
That’s about as likely to happen as the Autopian RV road trip.
Clearly that’s because it’s supposed to be a caravan road trip, no?
A caravan? That’s even worse than an RV. Good god I have standards you know.
I’d love to see Adrian live in an travel in a 1979 Cadillac Fleetwood Hearse turned into an gothic take on an apocalypse vehicle(mockery of a Mad Max Interceptor). Requires a black on black paintjob, spikes on the front end and wheels, lifted ride height, offroad tires, Duramax diesel swap, and a comfortable coffin bed in the back. Don’t forget the sound system.
I was with you right until you said diesel. I’m not a farmer.
An apocalypse vehicle would ideally run on a large array of fuel sources. A mechanical injection diesel can run many possible mixtures of petrol diesel, bio diesel, seed oil, animal fats, kerosene, brake fluid, automatic transmission fluid, ethanol, butanol, motor oil(new or used)…
Not the alcohol though. I’m drinking that.
Sleeping in hotel is nice. But they get really upset when you try to set a campfire.
Black blanket and sheets, yes?
Of course. Style doesn’t take a day off.