I know this will prompt a lot of "save up and do it the right way!" discussions but I'm throwing this out there anyway.
What I'm trying to do is get a short-arm Jeep to ride average to above-average on whoops, broken terrain and sand dunes. Thinking 40-50 mph on washboard/broken ground without bottoming out or getting too much air time with each tire.
What would you need to do to a short-armed Jeep to allow it to run somewhat well on those kinds of terrain?
I run a cheapo Rough Country 3.5 Series 2 suspension kit and while it has done very well on slow stuff, it's just bearable on-road and downright dismal on the dunes. My visit to Silver Lake in Michigan exposed all the flaws it had - I bottomed out hard on most landings and even while on approach to a dune and hitting ruts along thw way. Once my axles bounced and my wheels started to unload I lost traction and power and couldn't make it up the higher hills. Granted, I have several hundreds of pounds in aftermarket parts on, but I didn't think I'd do as marginally as I did.
I have some feedback from my buddies already: progressive coils, better shocks, possibly bumpstops. I wasn't sure if the AEV geometory correcton brackets would help since they flatten out the front arms - seems like they would.
If anyone is running a fairly good high-speed short-arm setup, can you chime in with your personal experiences? Thanks much!
What I'm trying to do is get a short-arm Jeep to ride average to above-average on whoops, broken terrain and sand dunes. Thinking 40-50 mph on washboard/broken ground without bottoming out or getting too much air time with each tire.
What would you need to do to a short-armed Jeep to allow it to run somewhat well on those kinds of terrain?
I run a cheapo Rough Country 3.5 Series 2 suspension kit and while it has done very well on slow stuff, it's just bearable on-road and downright dismal on the dunes. My visit to Silver Lake in Michigan exposed all the flaws it had - I bottomed out hard on most landings and even while on approach to a dune and hitting ruts along thw way. Once my axles bounced and my wheels started to unload I lost traction and power and couldn't make it up the higher hills. Granted, I have several hundreds of pounds in aftermarket parts on, but I didn't think I'd do as marginally as I did.
I have some feedback from my buddies already: progressive coils, better shocks, possibly bumpstops. I wasn't sure if the AEV geometory correcton brackets would help since they flatten out the front arms - seems like they would.
If anyone is running a fairly good high-speed short-arm setup, can you chime in with your personal experiences? Thanks much!