This experiment was a bug that Greg Henderson of Unofficial Use Only put in my brain during one of our Round Table discussions on the Jeep Talk Show... Greg is a super great knowledgeable guy. When he worked for AEV he built a lot of the Brutes you see running around today, and actually he just built two more Brute kits and delivering them to the customers this month.
What really kicked it off for me was in April 2025, I took a trip to Southern Utah from Northeast Arkansas in my TJ for a 2-week camping and wheeling adventure. After hundreds of miles on washboard gravel roads and bowling ball size rocks my control arm bushings were roached. Although I am very annal about maintenance I'm NOT easy on this Jeep so not really too surprised. I had 3 days left to wheel, and a 2,100-mile trip back home on roached bushings, which was unfortunate, but it would be difficult to get 3 different aftermarket company sets of bushings into Moab in time for it to matter. So that settled it for me, as soon as I got back home, time for the experiment.
My '04 TJ Specs:
What did I expect to gain from Gladiator control arms in a TJ?
While I was in there... I also did a 3/4" front and a 5" rear stretch, so I'm sitting at 99" wheelbase now.
What did I gain?
My "seat of the pants" feel is like I'm riding on a suspension now instead of on the ends of pogo sticks... best way I can describe it.
On the road ride is dramatically better than before. Off road I feel way more planted, and I immediately noticed it walks up ledges way easier than before.
It was a lot of work, I complicated it A LOT by throwing in the 5" stretch, or it would have been really easy, but I am very happy with the results.
I'm very much a novice fabricator, and I learned A LOT during this process, and yes... I'd definitely do it again.
What really kicked it off for me was in April 2025, I took a trip to Southern Utah from Northeast Arkansas in my TJ for a 2-week camping and wheeling adventure. After hundreds of miles on washboard gravel roads and bowling ball size rocks my control arm bushings were roached. Although I am very annal about maintenance I'm NOT easy on this Jeep so not really too surprised. I had 3 days left to wheel, and a 2,100-mile trip back home on roached bushings, which was unfortunate, but it would be difficult to get 3 different aftermarket company sets of bushings into Moab in time for it to matter. So that settled it for me, as soon as I got back home, time for the experiment.
My '04 TJ Specs:
- Original 4.0 I6
- AX15 with Hurst short throw (I swapped in cracked old 3550 housing)
- Flat belly tummy tuck - 1" Motor lift, 1-1/4" body lift, SYE, cable selector
- Rubi Dana 44's front and back.
- WJ Knuckle Swap with OTK custom made DOM Steering / front track bar relocation.
- 35" Nexen Roadian MTX
- Genright Crawler tank, highline fenders, rock rails.
- 2-1/2" OME Coils / Rancho 5000X shocks
- Skyjacker stock length lower control arms front and rear.
- Ironman 4x4 adjustable front upper
- Rubicon Express adjustable rear upper
What did I expect to gain from Gladiator control arms in a TJ?
- 25 year newer technology.
- Longer arms acting like a Mid Arm kit - Better geometry
- Ease of replacement no matter where I am.
- More durability since the TJ is WAY lighter than the JT (Gladiator).
- Better ride on the street
- Better performance off road
- the challenge of the fabrication
- and... because it's different.
While I was in there... I also did a 3/4" front and a 5" rear stretch, so I'm sitting at 99" wheelbase now.
What did I gain?
My "seat of the pants" feel is like I'm riding on a suspension now instead of on the ends of pogo sticks... best way I can describe it.
On the road ride is dramatically better than before. Off road I feel way more planted, and I immediately noticed it walks up ledges way easier than before.
It was a lot of work, I complicated it A LOT by throwing in the 5" stretch, or it would have been really easy, but I am very happy with the results.
I'm very much a novice fabricator, and I learned A LOT during this process, and yes... I'd definitely do it again.
