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Suggested Amendment: Get the AAA premium card for extended towing range. It's a good distance between Elko and Winnemucca Nevada with little in between... just sayin'.

Its a long way across Nebraska (400+ miles). At some point you may decide to extend your driving time for the day so that you do not have to wake up the next morning and still be in Nebraska (no offense).
None taken. Most states have their terminally boring parts, and Nebraska's stretches for four hundred miles along I-80. It's still not as bad as Iowa, though. :) And I'm in total agreement with you on the AAA Premium membership. Nice to know that even a major breakdown isn't going to completely screw you.
Along I-80 heading west out of Lincoln; I spy with my little eye something green...CORN. For hours. :) It was a looong day.
I-80... there's your problem. Get off the Interstate, take the Sandhills route and let the old girl stretch her legs. It's a beautiful drive, in an occasionally bleak sort of way, and you can stop at Carhenge along the way.
I learned one lesson on a highway trip way back when I had my '67.
I was several States away from home at a highway gas stop and as I was walking back to my car I saw a huge puddle of oil beneath my engine. I was sick wondering what it was and how I was going to get out of there. The dip stick showed I was full and the leak wasn't mine.
Now I always look at the ground for puddles before I pull in !
Ha! True story... I had just finished doing some work on our road sofa in preparation for a week-long swing through four states and numerous national parks and forests. As I'm looking out at the car parked in the driveway the next evening, I notice with great horror a sizeable puddle of hydraulic oil just inside the left rear wheel, directly underneath the location of a hydraulic suspension damper I had replaced the day before. Panic set in... right up until I realized that the "puddle" was actually sunlight from the setting sun shining through the wheel and making some odd shaped light spots in the shadows under the car. Damn near gave me a heart attack. And yes, there were a couple of times when I noticed big puddles under the car on our trip, but they were never from OUR car.
Yeah, we do have a lot of that, you just have to get further west and off of the interstate to really appreciate Nebraska, and you can really hammer down in the western part of the state, you can see for miles, and the police density is pretty low on the backroads. :)
Low, but I did manage to get a nice parting gift from Sioux County on our way into Wyoming. I haven't owned a radar detector since the 1980s, until I bought one two weeks ago. It didn't keep me from getting the ticket -- he was using instant-on K-band radar -- but it did let me get on the brakes quickly enough that I got ticketed for 75 in a 65 zone, not 90 in a 65 zone. BIG difference there. Maybe even enough to pay for the radar detector...
 
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