I live in Indiana (at 700ft. above sea level) and recently took my buggy to the rocky mountains and encountered a couple interesting "pressure-change" problems that I thought I would share with anyone who plans on taking their buggy to the mountains...
My CV-boots have always held fine with heavy load zip ties in Indiana. Going to the top of the mountain (11,500 ft above where I installed my CV-boots) they all blew up like balloons (and I mean HUGE

) and one completely blew off the flange. The other 3 had to have the small tie cut and then be "burped" back down to size. The opposite happened on the way down and at the bottom they looked vacuum-sealed. BTW... Zip Ties and CV Grease are NOT some of the things the Alpine Center Gift Shop (the only thing at the top of Rocky Mountain National Park and approx 60 miles from nearest hardware store) keeps in their inventory.

Many thanks to the guy who was packed to the gills for a long camping trip who had some because I didn't...

But I used to have some in there....

But I got a bunch in the buggy box again now.
My master cylinders encountered similar problems... The sea-level air pressure still trapped in my master cylinders activated my brakes just enough to eat halfway through my pads. I never smelled brakes once so I guess the race brakes work good. It also explains why my buggy felt power limited at the top. It was less the "thin air" in the motor and more the "fat air" in the brake master cylinder. I spent the whole week at 7,000 ft or above and put almost 700 miles on my buggy so that was a lot of slight braking. Some where along the way the loss of pad equaled out to the gain in pressure and they let up. Then when I got home it was the opposite as well. Had to pump my brakes 3 times to have pedal. Opened Master Cylinders and the boots were under a vacuum and were pulling my now worn pads all the way in.
I know it's all simple science NOW and maybe obvious to some, but I wasn't expecting it and found it quite interesting and frustrating at the same time. Just thought it would make for a good story for anyone else considering some high altitude play with their buggy.
