I’m going to condense this as much as possible. I bought a 99 TJ. From
some dude in BFE, KS. I know nearly nothing about Jeeps and come from the land of Toyota.
It came with a 4” lift. The whole thing just feels loosey goosey on the road at any speed. Nothing quite as bad as a “death wobble”. I have felt some oscillation that felt like it could get nasty if I didn’t speed up or slow down. But never like the steering wheel was ripped out of my hands or uncontrollable or anything.
Took it to a local Offroad shop that specializes in Jeeps so someone who knows what they’re feeling can tell me what I need. Basically they said the list of parts that are good under my rig is shorter than the list of parts that need to be replaced.
Basically it has brand new N3 Rough Country shocks, the springs are a little crusty but still fine. Everything else was way over greased by the previous owner. Some bolts not even tight. Looks like I have stock control arms non adjustable which gives me 0 degrees of caster. Basically I’d need to purchase another rough country lift save for coils and shocks if they even have that option. Oh and they said my ball joints are shot and I know that’s not as simple as just popping them out, that’s inner and outer seals with the diff and what not.
Also I still have a slip yoke…
I am fairly mechanically comfortable but my time is limited and my funds are about $3k +/- to do everything.
This is realistically just going to be my daily driver. I don’t plan on any rock crawling or major off-roading. So that leads me to my decision. Do I:
A. Replace everything with stock suspension components from RockAuto (probably mostly Dorman and MOOG, and Bilstein 4600s for the shocks). This allows me to put less strain on components, and when stuff wears out I can buy cheap replacements and treat it like a true daily. It also allows me to avoid doing an SYE which saves $$$.
-or-
B. Piecemeal together the components needed to maintain the 4” lift, get an SYE, and attempt install myself because everything is expensive AF, and just have the shop do an alignment?
some dude in BFE, KS. I know nearly nothing about Jeeps and come from the land of Toyota.
It came with a 4” lift. The whole thing just feels loosey goosey on the road at any speed. Nothing quite as bad as a “death wobble”. I have felt some oscillation that felt like it could get nasty if I didn’t speed up or slow down. But never like the steering wheel was ripped out of my hands or uncontrollable or anything.
Took it to a local Offroad shop that specializes in Jeeps so someone who knows what they’re feeling can tell me what I need. Basically they said the list of parts that are good under my rig is shorter than the list of parts that need to be replaced.
Basically it has brand new N3 Rough Country shocks, the springs are a little crusty but still fine. Everything else was way over greased by the previous owner. Some bolts not even tight. Looks like I have stock control arms non adjustable which gives me 0 degrees of caster. Basically I’d need to purchase another rough country lift save for coils and shocks if they even have that option. Oh and they said my ball joints are shot and I know that’s not as simple as just popping them out, that’s inner and outer seals with the diff and what not.
Also I still have a slip yoke…
I am fairly mechanically comfortable but my time is limited and my funds are about $3k +/- to do everything.
This is realistically just going to be my daily driver. I don’t plan on any rock crawling or major off-roading. So that leads me to my decision. Do I:
A. Replace everything with stock suspension components from RockAuto (probably mostly Dorman and MOOG, and Bilstein 4600s for the shocks). This allows me to put less strain on components, and when stuff wears out I can buy cheap replacements and treat it like a true daily. It also allows me to avoid doing an SYE which saves $$$.
-or-
B. Piecemeal together the components needed to maintain the 4” lift, get an SYE, and attempt install myself because everything is expensive AF, and just have the shop do an alignment?
