
Member III
Hey overlanders. I’m posting this question for myself and others. My question is, when to call it quits? At what point in the build process do you decide that your rig is no longer going to cut it?
I’m at a cross roads here. I drive a 2014 Jeep cherokee trailhawk. 3 inches of lift, 31” tires, underbelly armor, rock sliders, a factory rear locker, and a decent crawl ratio. For those of you that may not know, the Cherokee trailhawk comes with a rear locker, a brake controlled front differential, independent suspension all the way around.
There’s not much in the aftermarket that I can put on this jeep to make it any more Offroad worthy and it limits what I can do. My alignment is barely out of spec with no way to bring it back in( because of the suspension design and no camper adjustment) Iv heard horror stories of people grenading their differentials out on the trail with no upgrade to replace it with. People destroying the cv axles when the sway bar is disconnected.
The Jeep gets close to 20mpg and rides like a dream which makes it awesome for a road trip vehicle. But when the pavement ends. I’m really limited in what I can do. Mostly due to the capabilities of the jeep and how confident I feel with the reliability of it. Ofcourse every vehicle has its limitations and everyone breaks parts but for the terrain I like to run, this jeep may not be up for the task.
So my question still stands. At what point do you realize that maybe the rig you’ve been working on isn’t going to cut it? Do you keep building until you’ve reached the max of what the vehicle can handle? Do you stop the build and save your pennies for the next one? Do you just drive it as is and deal with the limitations?
Thanks!
I’m at a cross roads here. I drive a 2014 Jeep cherokee trailhawk. 3 inches of lift, 31” tires, underbelly armor, rock sliders, a factory rear locker, and a decent crawl ratio. For those of you that may not know, the Cherokee trailhawk comes with a rear locker, a brake controlled front differential, independent suspension all the way around.
There’s not much in the aftermarket that I can put on this jeep to make it any more Offroad worthy and it limits what I can do. My alignment is barely out of spec with no way to bring it back in( because of the suspension design and no camper adjustment) Iv heard horror stories of people grenading their differentials out on the trail with no upgrade to replace it with. People destroying the cv axles when the sway bar is disconnected.
The Jeep gets close to 20mpg and rides like a dream which makes it awesome for a road trip vehicle. But when the pavement ends. I’m really limited in what I can do. Mostly due to the capabilities of the jeep and how confident I feel with the reliability of it. Ofcourse every vehicle has its limitations and everyone breaks parts but for the terrain I like to run, this jeep may not be up for the task.
So my question still stands. At what point do you realize that maybe the rig you’ve been working on isn’t going to cut it? Do you keep building until you’ve reached the max of what the vehicle can handle? Do you stop the build and save your pennies for the next one? Do you just drive it as is and deal with the limitations?
Thanks!