BearFootSam
Well-Known Member
That makes sense, but I suppose it depends on the vehicle. My former Forester, which had a skid plate, to be fair, was very flat under the front to mid-section of the vehicle. Compared to the gladiator, even with the air dam, the forester was much sleeker underneath.The list makes sense save for one thing -
IFS vs. solid front axle - It's not really an argument if you have the stock air dam covering all of that. Plus all of those parts on the Jeep are rounded, not flat like IFS parts.
IFS has things hanging down as well.
The evidence of that is that I am usually the only person laying under the front of their car at a car show wiping the bugs off the lower control arms, front cross member, drag link and other parts under the front of my SX4. I don't need to do that with my JT - at least before I removed the air dam.
The lower control arms of IFS hang down low and are parallel to the front of the vehicle, making them worse than the front of a JT with the air dam. The LCAs on my car have flat fronts. The bars under my truck are rounded, not flat.
It's really a wash because the axle of the JT sits higher than the front cross member on my car that holds the lower control arms but it's prevented from catching wind by the air dam (or even a skid plate of similar shape)
I bet the IFS on my car presents more drag than the solid axle on my JT.
I noticed a drop in mpg when I removed the air dam on my truck.
This catches a LOT of stuff - and the bugs I have to wipe off the fronts of the control arms and other parts prove it -
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The only saving factor is the skid plate (adding about 40 pounds) but the control arms and outer steering and suspension still catch a lot of bugs and stuff -
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The air dam under the front of a Gladiator actually do a good job of routing the air around the front suspension and steering parts, but when we remove them to add weight, we will lower the mpg.
There's a reason that IFS vehicles have plastic air dams and shields that divert air and make the underside smoother - it all catches air under there.
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