Hey all, a quick question for my fellow Jeepers out there. What size lift would you say is the best or most practical for an overland build. I am stuck between a 2.5 or a 3.5 and could really use some input. Thanks!!
Off-Road Ranger I
Advocate II
I really do love the look of the 3.5 inch lift and yours looks awesome. Love that front bumper choice too. But I was also taking the drive shaft issue into consideration as well with going with a lift that size. I think to be honest that whatever the lift that came with mine now is just a trash lift because I have seen a 2.5 lift from a quality manufacturer and it sits much nicer than mine does. I also agree that the ride quality and travel is much more important than the overall hight as I am clearing 35's with no issue now on a sub par lift. What is your take on the stock driveshafts anyways? Is it something I should look into replacing either way once I start getting into some more rugged or serious terrain? Such as up in the mountains etc..?I have a 3.5" Rock Krawler MaxFlex lift and Bilstein 5100s with 35s and it rides like a Caddy on road and off-road. I had planned on staying with stock fenders was the reason I went with the 3.5". I kept rubbing them with my tires at stuff in the back so I ended up going to a set of MetalCloak Hardlines. It could really use 37s now to fill in the wheel gap but It's okay. One thing to think about going to a 3.5" is that at some point you will have to change driveshafts because of the angle it puts them in..even with control arms to help correct those. My front driveshaft lasted 6months before it had to be replaced. With the 3.5" you will also need extended brake lines and bump stops. If If I had it to do again I would probably go with the 2.5" lift and at some point once I get my rack on and back storage system built out I may still drop it back down to 2.5".
Agreed. Good point with the topic of travel and ride quality! Also like I said I'm clearing my tires now with no issue on a crappy "2.5 lift" whereas I'm sure I would be much happier with the ride quality and the way it sat and performed with a quality 2.5 lift like the 2.5 max travel from Rock Krawler.I wouldn't focus on height as much as what you are achieving for said height. While I don't run a Jeep, I just completely redid the front suspension on my Nissan. I gained no more than an inch of height, but nearly doubled my wheel travel and smoothed out the ride. Adding height does nothing for you if it rides like crud, or you are always picking up a tire and flopping around on obstacles.
Advocate II
If running a 2.5" lift the driveshaft is really a non-issue unless you are just beating on it or you step up to 37s. I drove mine with the stock front driveshaft till I needed it then I replaced it with an upgraded Adam's driveshaft. The rear is still stock and will remain that way till I have an issue. I have a friend that lives by me with MetalCloak Overland fenders and 2.5" midFlex Rock Krawler and it does him just fine. He doesn't have any clearance issues and his rides every bit as good as mine. I have more articulation with the extra height and that's about it. When I put my RK lift on it yielded 4.25" have increase on just suspension alone. His also yielded him about .75" taller than what the lift said. After I have had mine now since June last year I still yielded .75" taller than the lift said it was. I have talked to many folks with the RK lifts and all of them said they yield a little taller. It's an amazing lift and the spring/shock combo of the RK springs and Bilsteins ride like a dream. As long as you go with quality you won't go wrong either way. The midFlex and Max Travel both come with front swaybar disconnects and brake lines. 2.5 or 3.5" in the RK you can't go wrong in my opinion in ride comfort and performance.I really do love the look of the 3.5 inch lift and yours looks awesome. Love that front bumper choice too. But I was also taking the drive shaft issue into consideration as well with going with a lift that size. I think to be honest that whatever the lift that came with mine now is just a trash lift because I have seen a 2.5 lift from a quality manufacturer and it sits much nicer than mine does. I also agree that the ride quality and travel is much more important than the overall hight as I am clearing 35's with no issue now on a sub par lift. What is your take on the stock driveshafts anyways? Is it something I should look into replacing either way once I start getting into some more rugged or serious terrain? Such as up in the mountains etc..?
Thank you!If running a 2.5" lift the driveshaft is really a non-issue unless you are just beating on it or you step up to 37s. I drove mine with the stock front driveshaft till I needed it then I replaced it with an upgraded Adam's driveshaft. The rear is still stock and will remain that way till I have an issue. I have a friend that lives by me with MetalCloak Overland fenders and 2.5" midFlex Rock Krawler and it does him just fine. He doesn't have any clearance issues and his rides every bit as good as mine. I have more articulation with the extra height and that's about it. When I put my RK lift on it yielded 4.25" have increase on just suspension alone. His also yielded him about .75" taller than what the lift said. After I have had mine now since June last year I still yielded .75" taller than the lift said it was. I have talked to many folks with the RK lifts and all of them said they yield a little taller. It's an amazing lift and the spring/shock combo of the RK springs and Bilsteins ride like a dream. As long as you go with quality you won't go wrong either way. The midFlex and Max Travel both come with front swaybar disconnects and brake lines. 2.5 or 3.5" in the RK you can't go wrong in my opinion in ride comfort and performance.
Influencer I
Pathfinder III
1632
It drives horrible as it is with this particular set up on there already. At a bare minimum I need to replace that kit just to GET to the trails safely (south Florida isn't much of an area for overlanding lol) so I'm going to be driving to north Georgia for the most part at a minimum. A 50 min highway drive usually yields a lot of front end drifting steering wheel wobble and a generally unpleasant ride.I would stick with what you have, and spend your money on skid plates, recovery gear, and adventuring. Wheel it and let the rig tell you where it needs upgrades. I went full in when I bought mine, 3.5" Rock Krawler long arm coilover conversion, 37s, driveshafts, axle upgrades, brakes and everything else to make it all work together. Dropped almost $20k in parts/labor. It's been over a year since then and I'm still chasing little Gremlins and have been on exactly zero overlanding trips since then. I wheel a lot a local offroad parks, but I want to explore. So yeah, that's my .02, wheel it and it'll tell you where you need upgrades. Also, Nina Barlow of Barlow Adventures has written a cool article laying our her recommended build list in order to run the Rubicon. (https://barlows.us/2016/07/how-to-prepare-your-rig-for-the-rubicon-trail/). I would consider it that to be the basic setup for overlanding and probably the most anyone would ever need unless you're gonna be a career overlander. But again, that just my 2 cents!
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