Hi all,
I've been looking into the idea of overloading for awhile now, and would like actually get into it. Unfortunately, my truck is only two wheel drive, and I'm a poor college kid (so I can't just go out and buy a new truck). I've been looking into new tires and a lift, but is that a smart investment or should I just hold off and wait until I can buy a 4X4?
Any advice or guidance would be greatly appreciated! Thanks in advance.
Don't let 4x2 stop you. There is a thread on Overland Canada of a couple guys leaving Calgary Alberta put a basket on the roof of his BMW coupe and drove across Canada to do the Trans-Labrador trail. Then later did a trip from Calgary to Vegas then north up the Demster Hwy to Inuvik then chartered a plane to Tukryuktuk to dip their feet in the Artic Ocean. All in a front wheel drive BMW coupe.
Micheal has a great videos on the OB website like the Boot camp series. Every now and then I watch those videos to bring myself back to reality, and realize we have everything we 'need' and just go out and see the world. I used Micheals 3 Plano box method to get out of town quick.
Get the basic equipment that won't break the bank like shelter, clothing, first aid, food, cooking, recovery gear like a shovel and tow strap. A good set of light truck AT's to start and just get out. There is more stock trails than hard core technical ones that you can legally get at alone. Explore the stuff you can get at safely and save up and build a overland rig if you want when you have the money. I agree with the others, you have to decide what are you wanting to do with your rig and you can even trail run in 4x2. Here is the inside baseball. Most of us don't wheel in 4x4 all the time. Time and place. Most of North America is paved or gravel and stock doable.
It's taken me over 30 years of wrenching jeeps since I was 17, building, breaking, fixing slowly adding and buying the best gear available at the time to get to the point where we are now.
Rome was not built in a day, niether will your truck or your experience. Take your time and do it right. It's cheaper over the long run.
That is part of the whole overlanding experience. You don't get that from reading a blog or forum, you get that experience buy going out exploring and traveling, breaking things, evaluating and then fixing or even scraping and starting over again.
Get out and see what is out there. Explore for a bit then build. Final piece of advice, don't compare yourself, your situation, your vehicle to others. Don't try to keep up with the jones'....that will ruin overlanding for you.
Enough said. I hope that helps.
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