I think we all have learned a few lessons over the years of wheeling and I was thinking we should compile them in a thread. One reason I think getting back into wheeling will be (relatively) expensive is that from all the mistakes i have made on other vehicles I want to "do it right the first time."
I've had 4 cherokee's and have learned a bunch from forums, wheeling, wrenching, etc on things i would do differently to make a cherokee "better" then my previous 4.
I've had 4 cherokee's and have learned a bunch from forums, wheeling, wrenching, etc on things i would do differently to make a cherokee "better" then my previous 4.
- Plate the whole frame before doing anything to it.
- never go above 33's on a cherokee that will see road time (JMO)
- I don't need reservoir shocks for rec. wheeling/exp'ing. but white bodies suck for something that you want to be comfortable. bilstien 5100's or the like are what i will be putting on the next rig
- steering... just fucking do it right the first time and get rid of the stock y-link bull shit... i have broken/ sheered/bent beef tie-rod upgrades.
- As cool as 44 f/r or bigger is... if I want to just wheel what rausch has then a mild 30 and upgraded rear will work just dandy.
- i still think 3" and 33's is a stellar combo for mix mild wheeling and exp'ing.
- reliability is key... every rig i get will have the coolant flushed, tune-up, and necessary sensors to get the damn CEL off so that i don't have to worry about it being a POS on the trail.
- I don't necessarily need "the best" springs/shocks/tires/lift to rec. wheel reliably... don't buy shit parts... but my dream of having deavers on a cherokee have been superceded by maybe a set of bds's if im splurging.
Comment