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Should I lift the Gladiator or not?

ShadowsPapa

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Well I guess I am different here. I am retired and 68. Went the Overland route. I added Line x, Tonneau cover and mopar mudflaps. I get 21- 22 mpg around town and 25-26 on interstate here in Colorado with higher elevation with 85 octane gas. I think I’m staying with this. Larger tires and lift hurt fuel mileage, power and ride for sure. I don’t off road really so what the heck ? this thing rides great,handles good and performance seems good . Why mess with it especially while it’s under warranty ?
No kidding. Why lift if you don't need it for biiig tires or off-roading. It adds other things into the mix.
If you want it for looks, it's a give and take. You will introduce other possible things, and you will drop mpg with almost any mod like a lift or tires.
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Klicht87

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I have a Willys and have been on the fence with big tires and mild lift. I added the 1.5" teraflex front spacer. I like the leveled look. As much as I want the look of 35s/37s, they would only be cosmetic and I can't really justify the cost of wheels, tires, lift, etc...especially as this is my daily driver. Since I have the willys, it has the JL Rubicon red shocks which I think are perfectly fine. I think I'm just going to put the rubicon size tires (285/70/17) or the Mickey Thompson Baja Boss ATs at 255/85/17 which are skinny 35s.
 

Snake Eyes

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Have a Sport S Max Tow. Soft off road. Going to be towing more than anything (4000 pound TT) so have left it stock to do what the trim and package was designed to do and I get lots of nice comments on it when I park it and go into stores. It is Sarge green and has ditch lights with come custom hood vinyl. Would like to not lose more mpg than towing will already do. Currently I get the same mpg as you.
 

willhonkforparts

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Yes. Just a small 2" spacer lift and 285 tires will make it look so much better.
 

Barnaby’sdad

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No kidding. Why lift if you don't need it for biiig tires or off-roading. It adds other things into the mix.
If you want it for looks, it's a give and take. You will introduce other possible things, and you will drop mpg with almost any mod like a lift or tires.
This is something that I think doesn’t get brought up enough. I don’t think I’ve ever known someone that lifted a vehicle and didn’t have one issue or another pop-up.

That’s not getting into the height of the vehicle, either. Even at 6’3”, with my knee issues, I’d need to get some sort of side steps to help get into it if I lifted it. If you do typical running board/side steps, that’s going to cut clearance (would kind of defeat the purpose of doing the lift, to me), so those steps would end up being ~$2,300 for me.
 

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What issue’s exactly?
  1. Death wobble is real. Not using a quality lift can introduce it and shops don’t like to diagnose or try to fix it once it starts.
  2. Noise, squeaks, creaks, and things that go bump. When changing the geometry of a stock vehicle stress is added to a lot of different moving parts. A once quiet ride can become a test of your patience.
  3. Brake line extensions are a good idea to avoid stretching or even breaking them on the trail.
  4. Increased wind resistance due to the higher stance will cause a decrease in fuel mileage.
  5. If you’re building to improve its looks, keeping it simple will make a better daily driver. If planning to wheel it hard you’ll put up with the frustrations that can happen.
 

Rocksalt

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op you csn run 285 70 17 with no lift if you simply want a larger tire
 

Sigz

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I contemplated doing a lift but settled for a level.

Outside of some old farming roads/paths and hunting access tracts - I don't off road much.

A level gives me a nice look with a small bump ('lift") in the front.
 

Jeeperjamie

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Your gonna lose MPGs if you lift it. You got to decide what it's worth to you. I get 17+ I'm mine lifted 3-1/4 inches on 37's. I also have a Max tow with 4.10 gears. We averaged over 18 overall on the way to the Mountains yesterday there and back total. Was around a 4hr round trip plus the 4 or 5 hours we rode around while up there mine looks like this but everyone's MPGs are gonna be different based on weight, bumpers and tires, brand and type etc. Also driving habits come into play as well.

Jeep Gladiator Should I lift the Gladiator or not? PXL_20230310_061643019.PORTRAIT




Today's average after yesterday's trip


Jeep Gladiator Should I lift the Gladiator or not? 16835525793764977377645899585718


You can ask 100 different people what their MPGs are and 100 different answers. You gotta decide if it's worth it to you or not to do it. If you don't need to lift then why do it but if you want the look then there will be compromise. To me I had goal as far as running 37's before I bought the JT. I said if I could get at least 17 MPGs on average then it was worth it to me and I put a lot of thought into my build with that in mind. Researched weight of tires bumpers and winch before putting them on and chose a more aerodynamic front bumper as well. In the end though if your looking for validation then you can definitely get it here, I say do it.
 
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So just to give you an idea, here is my JT….
80th Anniversary Edition which is based off the Sport.
1.5” Teraflex Leveling kit (which is around $100)
Vision Se7en wheels with 295/70R18 Falken Wildpeak AT3W (which is a 34x11.5) both from @Discount Tire for total of $1600 during a sale.
Added Mopar LCAs ($70 at the time) to bring back some caster.
My daily drive to work is 60 mph on country roads and I’m averaging 18mpg (hills, winding turns, a few stops). Highway driving is closer to 20mpg.
Rides better than stock (thanks to the LCAs) and looks a little better I think.

906E3A03-6E04-4B9C-9016-2BCA81BFF3E7.jpeg


672B6F25-4E6D-4A92-9F22-4F1763F88E82.jpeg


7BA79149-FF54-4029-AE82-E35745162A0D.jpeg
Thank you for the shout out. Great looking rig! Thanks for sharing.
 

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I've been thinking about adding a lift also not worried about my mpg I'm more concerned about having some sort of possible drive train issues and being denied a warranty claim if it happened
 

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I'm more concerned about having some sort of possible drive train issues and being denied a warranty claim if it happened
The molar 2" lift will not void your warranty, and I've been told it will drive as well as a stock Rubicon. (Not sure about the driving part as I have not done it yet....)
 

CyclopsDad

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I have only 8500 miles on my 2022 HA Gladiator. I estimate 5500 of those miles were on the interstate @ 75 mph and only 10 miles were done off road. What I really appreciate about my current wheel/tire combination is how quiet they are. Long trips with noisy off road tire is rough. In the near future when retire I will consider bigger AT tires to have more fun off road, but for now my wife and I enjoy the quiet ride to retirement.
 

Jeeperjamie

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The molar 2" lift will not void your warranty, and I've been told it will drive as well as a stock Rubicon. (Not sure about the driving part as I have not done it yet....)
No lift will void your warranty, that's false facts that people just say for whatever reason. Unless you change the stock components to after market components then it will be covered under warranty. Using this logic would mean larger tires would void your warranty which would wear out stock components faster than a lift would
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