You'd do well to consider drilling the rivet holes out and using 5/16-18 nutserts instead. Experience has shown that if you do drop down onto something, you want more fastener clamping force than those ARBs use to avoid transferring the impact forces to wrinkle the tub. It costs a bit of time for the installation and cost for the nutserts, installation tool, and screws, but that's cheap prevention for tub damage. Plus, if you have to remove them for any reason, you don't have to drill out what look to me to be stainless steel rivets from that installation video. Stainless steel rivets wreak havoc on drill bits.Well I have a set coming I'm going to install. I live in mississippi so not alot of rock crawling but do go over logs from time to time and wife needs the steps
Unlike some of the others in this thread, I decided to compromise on sliders, and, for me, it's by far my biggest compromise in my build. My arthritis only gets worse every year, and I, too have a short wife that I'd like to keep happy so she'll accompany me on an occasional back-country adventure because I do enjoy her company. I'm not building a primarily-rock-crawling rig, but I do want to be able to crawl some fun routes occasionally. I opted for Rockslide Engineering step sliders, but I did extensive mods, including inside and outside aluminum tub backers, to make them more capable. The two huge drawbacks are weight (with my mods, they weigh about 170 lb, and that was very hard to swallow, especially with a serious eye for overall vehicle weight) and width - they stick out a long ways. If my wife and I were younger (or I was blessed with better longevity genes), I'd have gone with a much lighter, narrower slider, as "jjvw and his minions" have espoused.
As I've said many times, it's your rig, so build it how you see fit. When skinning cats, there are many options...
