AverageOverlander
Well-Known Member
I'd recommend the Max Tow all the way, you know exactly what you're looking at.Hey Everyone,
This is my first post. I posted this on another website before I found this site which specializes in Gladiators. I would really apricate your input.
I am trying to save money on a Gladiator purchase so I can properly outfit the Jeep for Overlanding/Camping.
I am thinking about buying a Gladiator Sport with the Max Tow Package in lieu of the Rubicon because you get the most heavy duty Dana 44 axles front and back and 4.10 gears. This saves about 16K over the Rubicon
If I add front and back air lockers, a manual sway bar disconnect, 33” KO 2 tires and steel front bumper ready for a winch I believe it will cost about $7,000. So, I am ahead about $9K and can use the rest of the funds to outfit this vehicle with other overlanding equipment.
Does this make sense to you? Am I missing something? Is the Sport with Max Tow Package suspension system going to be a problem off roading?
What are your thoughts?
Thanks,
Geoff
The sway bar disconnect on the Rubi requires you to be in 4wd to work too, couple that with the expensive fix if it goes vs quick mechanical links, and that feature borderline cancels itself out imo.
My sway bars are disconnected the second I hit gravel(in 2wd).
I just went through a very similar decision, any rubicon I found was ~$10k more..
In the end I just couldn't justify it.
I now have an Overland with a 2" suspension lift, sway bar disconnects, 33" tires, and my LSD will come in handy for winter driving. After several adventures, I'm very happy with my decision .
I will add a winch at which point my Overland build will still come in cheaper than a Rubi.
And even with the Rubi, I would have added a winch and a bit of suspension lift as well, so realistically my Overland build will take me anywhere I'll ever need to go, rides and handles like a beast on and off-road, and is $6-9k cheaper, money that can be spent on recovery & camping gear.
To be honest though, especially with a quality rig like you're talking about building, you'll probably want to factor in some money for suspension upgrade, the stock stuff is not impressive imo.
I think it comes down to paying for convenience. With the Rubi you can pay jeep to manage all that stuff you're talking about, and simply drive an amazing unit off the lot.
Or, you can manage and build your own unit, exactly tailored to your preferences, and your money will probably go a bit further and your unit a bit more customized to your likings.
Either way, you won't be disappointed, I can promise you that haha.
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