I have a Jeep again! Let's go!
When I moved away from the north I got mildly bullied into getting a "practical" car with better gas mileage and I couldn't really justify a fun car. Well A few months ago I moved back and and now the fun vehicle IS the practical vehicle! Went on a long road trip and bought my 2006 Wrangler from a single-owner in Florida, essentially rust-free. 220k miles on her but meticulous maintenance records since the day she rolled off the lot. Getting a frame and tub that clean was worth the drive and I'll pop a new engine in her when the time comes. Heavy duty rust prevention is going to be the lion's share of my routine maintenance.
Goals for the rig: (copied a bit from a different post but I'm getting everything centered here)
I would like to be able to do some rock crawling in the summers for fun, nothing too extreme. But Threep is definitely a daily driver, my main and only vehicle, and needs to be able to handle going on the autoroute sometimes. However, most of my “daily driving” where I live would be considered by many to be snow wheeling. Mud and snow are my number one priorities (as Mud Season delivers some 2 foot deep mud holes on regular roads, worse on the unmaintained rd I live on)
For reference, this is what our roads look like:
When I lived here as a teenager I had a ZJ that came to me already lifted 4.5 inches on 34’s for 900 bucks because that’s what you could get for so cheap up here back then. That rig took me pretty much anywhere. Tow ropes and using a hi-lift jack as a come along got me out of anything the wheels didn't. I liked being able to pull people out of ditches and having the capable rig to go out and drag trees off roads after storms.
Threep is stock suspension with 33's and is surprisingly capable with no lift in comparison to the very tall ZJ (Peep the Jeep) but I have gotten her stuck once already in something I absolutely could have driven through with Peep. I'm also running into a lot of issues of snowpack filing the wheelwells and getting me jammed up so a lift is on the shortlist.
I want to build out Threep to be a reliable "get you there" rig through the kinds of daily driving I do.
Build plan, subject to much change based on how things play out and what advice I get from you guys:
1. Zone offroad 4.25 combo lift
2. A winch of some sort
3. Highline fenders
4. Hurculine the tub
5. Dana 44 rear axle
6. Diff lock
I'm going to try to use this first post as a directory for the build.
Initial undercoating and paint
Radio install
Headlights and Fog lights
Fender trim and extension
When I moved away from the north I got mildly bullied into getting a "practical" car with better gas mileage and I couldn't really justify a fun car. Well A few months ago I moved back and and now the fun vehicle IS the practical vehicle! Went on a long road trip and bought my 2006 Wrangler from a single-owner in Florida, essentially rust-free. 220k miles on her but meticulous maintenance records since the day she rolled off the lot. Getting a frame and tub that clean was worth the drive and I'll pop a new engine in her when the time comes. Heavy duty rust prevention is going to be the lion's share of my routine maintenance.
Goals for the rig: (copied a bit from a different post but I'm getting everything centered here)
I would like to be able to do some rock crawling in the summers for fun, nothing too extreme. But Threep is definitely a daily driver, my main and only vehicle, and needs to be able to handle going on the autoroute sometimes. However, most of my “daily driving” where I live would be considered by many to be snow wheeling. Mud and snow are my number one priorities (as Mud Season delivers some 2 foot deep mud holes on regular roads, worse on the unmaintained rd I live on)
For reference, this is what our roads look like:
This is what our good rds look like:
This is what our average roads look like:
And this picture (downloaded from the internet because I'm too busy driving on these rds to stop and take a picture lol) is what our unmaintained rds (like the one I live on) look like:
For two months every spring we have this on the good roads:
This on the average roads:
And the bad rds are just straight closed. You park at the bottom and walk home.
For a half a second in the summer, the dirt rds are washboard and the handful of pavement rds in downtown look like this:
This is what our average roads look like:
And this picture (downloaded from the internet because I'm too busy driving on these rds to stop and take a picture lol) is what our unmaintained rds (like the one I live on) look like:
For two months every spring we have this on the good roads:
This on the average roads:
And the bad rds are just straight closed. You park at the bottom and walk home.
For a half a second in the summer, the dirt rds are washboard and the handful of pavement rds in downtown look like this:
When I lived here as a teenager I had a ZJ that came to me already lifted 4.5 inches on 34’s for 900 bucks because that’s what you could get for so cheap up here back then. That rig took me pretty much anywhere. Tow ropes and using a hi-lift jack as a come along got me out of anything the wheels didn't. I liked being able to pull people out of ditches and having the capable rig to go out and drag trees off roads after storms.
Threep is stock suspension with 33's and is surprisingly capable with no lift in comparison to the very tall ZJ (Peep the Jeep) but I have gotten her stuck once already in something I absolutely could have driven through with Peep. I'm also running into a lot of issues of snowpack filing the wheelwells and getting me jammed up so a lift is on the shortlist.
I want to build out Threep to be a reliable "get you there" rig through the kinds of daily driving I do.
Build plan, subject to much change based on how things play out and what advice I get from you guys:
1. Zone offroad 4.25 combo lift
2. A winch of some sort
3. Highline fenders
4. Hurculine the tub
5. Dana 44 rear axle
6. Diff lock
I'm going to try to use this first post as a directory for the build.
Initial undercoating and paint
Radio install
Headlights and Fog lights
Fender trim and extension
Last edited:
