you must have had a snorkle on itI once traveled the entire globe in a Toyota Camry and found the lost city of Atlantis
you must have had a snorkle on itI once traveled the entire globe in a Toyota Camry and found the lost city of Atlantis
Enthusiast III
That's awsome! At least your doing it!These are my Stock 4x4s. Other than getting better tires, I do nothing to them except maintenance and using sound judgement on where I go. We try something risky every once in awhile, but as @GetOutand4WD shows above you have to be prepared to work.
Right now, we just hang out shuffling around our home state of Pennsylvania, so we pretty much know what we will need when we will need it.
We do plan to travel in the future, so we are starting to incorporate longer distances with more time away from pavement.
View attachment 134752View attachment 134753View attachment 134754View attachment 134755View attachment 134756
Member III
Yeah. My NISSAN PATROL Y60 HIGHROOF is an overland tool for my and my ego. Should be ashamed of this?that'll be me :-)
2WD and it gets me out and about.
it's all about the tyres.
Traveler II
Totally agree! I used my rig stock for the longest time. No harm is using the raw power/reliability that a stock rig provides.It’s not difficult with stock 4x4’s. I put over 5k miles off road with my baby Cherokee KL with 4x4. And on the stock all terrain tires until a year ago. Not a lot of rock-crawling type trails, but it only got stuck twice in 5 years, and they were both ditch-related user error situations. I finally traded it in on a new Ranger with the FX4 package last month, and the only thing I plan to do to it is KO2’s after the stock AT’s wear out like I did with the Jeep.
Member III
16986
Some people are satisfied with their destinations, that's okay but others seek a higher level of adventure and remoteness which comes at a much higher cost. I'm not happy with sites that anyone can get to. When I had a family I had to consider them, their safety and their convinces. I don't have that life anymore, I can chose my own destinations.Yeah. My NISSAN PATROL Y60 HIGHROOF is an overland tool for my and my ego. Should be ashamed of this?
Well.... If I go with my family and wish to calm down, feel nature and make my wife happy I take old budy: T4 SYNCRO, pretty stock. Believe me - I make 85% of trails with T4 what I can do with Patrol.View attachment 138266
So the answer it NO. You don't need any mods to make Your adventure happen.
Off-Road Ranger I
19695
Answers in the quote. ^^^^^^What are the realities of overlanding in a stock 4X4?
You will have more time and budget to actually overland. There is no reason why any 4x4 cannot travel overland completely stock. The reality of lifting and fitting bigger tires is you are creating extra stress loads on every suspension and driveline component. Every suspension mod creates a weak link somewhere else.
As you say, the manufacturers pour millions of $$$$ into Research and Development to build reliable, capable vehicles with fabulous warranties. The aftermarket pours millions of $$$$ into advertizing, marketing and hype to suck in anyone trying to keep up with the Joneses while often creating conditions which will void thier warranty.
The reality is stock you will have time and money to travel.
What are the capabilities and restrictions associated with "stock"?
Without a doubt a well engineered stock 4x4 or.... from the factory will perform very well. Todays 4x4s need nothing if the terrain you are running is passable. Climbing a waterfall.... you might need more clearance or better approach, departure angles or aired down floatation tires..... but then you will likely not be carrying much "overlanding" gear either. Overlanding and rock crawling are different activities. Read some books on overlanders from 60 years ago. Most used stock vehicles.
Why do you say that larger tires and lifts are "required"?
Actually larger tires present as many disadvantages as perceived advantages. While you might get more floatation, that also means less psi to gain traction. Traction and floatation are opposites, the choice is a compromize, on gravel skinny tires will grip with more control, wide floatation tires with lower psi loading will drive like they are on marbles. But floatation will help running sand dunes where you need a lower psi loading.
Pick tires which match the terrain you will be running.
Does adventure require investments into a modified rig?
Absolutely not. It requires investment is gasoline, permits perhaps, and travel.
Contributor II
i'm not sure what all is being called 4X4 anymore. i had a wrangler when they first came out and it was "4X4", but it got stuck and only one wheel in the back and front spun, same as other vehicles. i just had a big F350 with 4X4 stickered on the rear of the bed and same thing, turn the switch to 4hi or 4lo and only one tire spins. don't know how they are marketing things as Four Wheel Drive when it isn't.The term "Stock 4x4" today is not what it was 40 years ago.
You are describing 4WD thru open differentials. The solution is selectable lockers. Always has been.i'm not sure what all is being called 4X4 anymore. i had a wrangler when they first came out and it was "4X4", but it got stuck and only one wheel in the back and front spun, same as other vehicles. i just had a big F350 with 4X4 stickered on the rear of the bed and same thing, turn the switch to 4hi or 4lo and only one tire spins. don't know how they are marketing things as Four Wheel Drive when it isn't.
yep, compared to the cost of a new vehicle, anything is a better buy. For $70K if you start with anything 15 or more years old, you will be far ahead after spending $50K on upgrades since that 15 year old year old 4x4 might not have an onboard computer to screw up when you are 100 miles from nowhere. Old School rules. Your Chevy is over the top for me but quite right, what you drive is a bargain compared to a Taco ot Raptor or....it will go everywhere a stock vehicle will go and places a stock vehicle never could. and i can build 3 or 4 very nicely modded trucks for what you pay for a stocker nowadays anyways...
Advocate I
you are mixing wheeling, like a week end going out, or maybe a 5 day trip on some off road trails with long overland trips. Try to do an asian tour in that, filled to the GVM for many months and let me know how it works out for you. All of the pople who are doing this, after the fist failure, wich is usually very early in the trip, the minimum they do is to return to stock or as close to stock tyre size and remove all wheel spacers and what ever else they did to fit the monster tyres they had on.wow.....
modified trucks break easier??
don't think so, unless you buy sub-standard equipment, are not mechanically inclined or just have a crappy mechanic do the work for you.
i have nothing against stock, but the way people carry on you would think modified trucks were made of glass.
been wheeling my 4 ton, big inch lifted, "huge" tires, 21 ft long 85 K30 crew since the mid '90's without EVER breaking, being stranded or frying a wheel bearing or spindle cause of my "massive" tires. and it will and has passed every safety insp. we have in bc.
i don't give a rats ass about my poor mileage because it more than makes up for it in every other catagory, which is far more important to me than some stock mileage.
it will go everywhere a stock vehicle will go and places a stock vehicle never could. and i can build 3 or 4 very nicely modded trucks for what you pay for a stocker nowadays anyways...
ya a stocker can go quite a few places, but a modded truck will go even more places, with way less drama than a stocker.
just look at the vid of the logging truck, that is representive of how a stock truck would climb that hill, lots of shakin' going on and some incredible shock loads to the whole drivetrain. a properly modded truck would walk up that hill like nothing with no
effort and without shaking the fillings out of your teeth and chucking the ring gear out your diff.
if you don't like modded trucks- fine, but fer chris sakes, give it a break about modded trucks, in reality most of what is written here about them is about as accurate as the germans winning ww2
as was mentioned, having racks and rtt's, and 50 jerry cans and 20 hi lifts hanging all over your rig is not going to make it more capable, but nobody seems to have a prob wit that...
like i said, i have zero probs with people wheeling stock, why does everyone seem to have a prob with people wheeling modified?
don't knock it til you try it, if stock is the end all, why do we spend over 350 billon a yr modifying our vehicles?
bah! shake head, end of rant...
Advocate I
Member III
Enthusiast III
Member III
Yeah they do its called racing and most auto mfgs go to those same companies to outfit their vehicles. I dont know of any auto mfg that produce their own shocks aside from really high end super cars think koenigseg. The beauty of suspension mfg doing their r&d on the race track is they are able to push them beyond the limits we could on the road and if something is gonna break and show bad engineering is on the track. If you chose a company that don't do racing and constantly strive to have a good product then thats your faultI'm not saying lifted vehicles can't be reliable, but most lift comoanies don't spend anywhere near the money on R&D as auto mfgs do.
Enthusiast III