Sponsored

under Armor in order of importance

CAWJENCHICKEN

Member
First Name
CJ
Joined
Jun 20, 2022
Threads
5
Messages
10
Reaction score
3
Location
VIRGINIA
Vehicle(s)
2022 JEEP GLADIATOR RUBICON
Occupation
LONGSHOREMAN SHIP CLERK
I have been searching and reading up on rock rails and belly skids and control arm skids and i am trying to put together them in a logical order. I have a 2022 JTR on 3.5 gamechanger and 37s. I do already have diff skids. as time/money allows i want to logically upgrade the rock rails and skids. What I cannot seem to find an answer on is: is it worth getting belly skids and upgrading the rock rails at later time or are the rock rails something that should be delt with first. I live and wheel on the east coast (aaoc, windrock, rausch creek). In the perfect world I would get all at once. I am leaning towards belly skid first then control arm skids then rock sliders. any guidance will be much appreciated. I want to be able to wheel tougher trails while coming out with as little battle scars as possible for my daily driver.
Sponsored

 

Zachanadandy

Well-Known Member
First Name
Zach
Joined
Oct 17, 2023
Threads
4
Messages
3,032
Reaction score
4,817
Location
Patterson, ca
Vehicle(s)
2023 gladiator Mojave
Occupation
Electrical foreman
I think belly skids, especially the unprotected oil pan, are the most critical. The rubicon rock rails aren't great but the will do the job unless you really slam them. I'd do rock sliders after that, but I've never run control arm skids in 25 years of playing in the rocks out west.
 

Camaroboi13

Well-Known Member
First Name
Justin
Joined
Aug 22, 2022
Threads
13
Messages
1,810
Reaction score
2,904
Location
SoCal
Vehicle(s)
87 XJ Pioneer, 17 WK2 3.6, 18 JLU 3.6, 22 JTOD 3.0
Occupation
LEO - Life in Chino
Engine/oil pan and transfer case would be the most important underneath. Having said that, I’ve drug my sliders around 10x more than anything under the vehicle.
 

Scott L

Well-Known Member
First Name
Scott
Joined
Feb 16, 2022
Threads
5
Messages
314
Reaction score
527
Location
Strasburg VA
Vehicle(s)
21 Gladiator Rubicon Gecko
Occupation
Depends who you ask
Sliders first. Choose your lines carefully until you can put a belly skid youll be fine. Factory skids while pretty lame do provide protection.
 

bd100

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 31, 2022
Threads
28
Messages
764
Reaction score
746
Location
USA Midwest
Vehicle(s)
JT, WK2, ole' Ram
If you want to prioritize what is most likely to be hit, not the most expensive to repair, then I'd start with the rear frame side control arm skids, then the rear shock mount skids, and also get a hitch skid plate to plug in when offroad.
 

Sponsored

mx5red

Well-Known Member
First Name
Paul
Joined
May 7, 2020
Threads
28
Messages
1,495
Reaction score
2,228
Location
San Diego
Vehicle(s)
2020 Firecracker JTR; 2020 DGC JLUR
Build Thread
Link
Worried about getting stranded? Body damage?
There is a big difference between what gets scratched most often vs what I worry about most.
I don’t have belly skids but have sliders, oil pan skid, diff skids, FAD skid, control arm/shock skids, rear frame skids, and hitch skid.
On hard trails my rock sliders and hitch skid always hit. Various spots underneath will drag at some point due to breakover angle, these are usually spots along the frame and stock crossmembers. Nothing fragile.
I put the engine skid on to protect the oil pan, and more importantly the transmission coolant lines that hang low in front of the crossmember. However, I rarely scratch that. But I still would add that because f you ripped a line or gashed your oil pan that’s not something you can trail repair.
I grind my rock sliders all the time. I wouldn’t want the stock rubicon sliders for what I do.

my priorities would be sliders, diffs, hitch, and oil pan.
Someone told me they had a hard time changing their shock because the bracket was bent. So I think there is value in those skids, too, depending on what you plan on wheeling.

personally I haven’t seen the benefit of getting belly skids.
 

Camaroboi13

Well-Known Member
First Name
Justin
Joined
Aug 22, 2022
Threads
13
Messages
1,810
Reaction score
2,904
Location
SoCal
Vehicle(s)
87 XJ Pioneer, 17 WK2 3.6, 18 JLU 3.6, 22 JTOD 3.0
Occupation
LEO - Life in Chino

PuddleJumper

Well-Known Member
First Name
Cortlund
Joined
Jan 17, 2024
Threads
68
Messages
2,540
Reaction score
3,373
Location
Alexandria, Virginia
Vehicle(s)
23' JTM, 22' JTR, 22' F56S,
Build Thread
Link
Occupation
STACK Infrastructure Critical Operations Technician
Vehicle Showcase
1
I have been searching and reading up on rock rails and belly skids and control arm skids and i am trying to put together them in a logical order. I have a 2022 JTR on 3.5 gamechanger and 37s. I do already have diff skids. as time/money allows i want to logically upgrade the rock rails and skids. What I cannot seem to find an answer on is: is it worth getting belly skids and upgrading the rock rails at later time or are the rock rails something that should be delt with first. I live and wheel on the east coast (aaoc, windrock, rausch creek). In the perfect world I would get all at once. I am leaning towards belly skid first then control arm skids then rock sliders. any guidance will be much appreciated. I want to be able to wheel tougher trails while coming out with as little battle scars as possible for my daily driver.
I ain't done shit. the stocks skids work surprisingly well. not to say i wont upgrade in the future but im not gonna hold off wheeling, the stocks do just fine. If you had a Toyota I'd say other wise, as i have seen rapid transmission, T-case and fuel tank deletes. Diffs are meh but if you got em run em. the important bits are oil pan, trans, heat exchanger, T-case, and fuel tank. next to important in my book would be rocker/sliders, diffs, arms, shock mounts, etc. with 37s and 3.5in of lift, odds are you aint hittin shit unless u get into some serious rocks. I wheel stock on 33s and clear 90% of the trails I hit.
 

Rusty PW

Well-Known Member
First Name
Russ
Joined
Jan 10, 2022
Threads
37
Messages
11,447
Reaction score
30,510
Location
Fayette Nam, Pennsyltucky
Website
www.youtube.com
Vehicle(s)
'22 JTRD, '11 370Z Nismo, '07 Honda VFR
Build Thread
Link
Occupation
Muff Diver
I wheel the same places as you do. Get the control arm skids. That is low hanging fruit for the rocks. A good set of rock rails. I have the White Knuckle set. I've drop 3ft on to them with no issues. Then I would get the belly skids.
 

Jaxmax

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jack
Joined
Jun 28, 2020
Threads
54
Messages
2,859
Reaction score
4,641
Location
Bally, Pa.
Vehicle(s)
Jeeps....... 2021 Mojave , 2019 Wrangler
Occupation
Electrical Manager
I wheel once in a while ,Rausch, but am not lifted , sliders are the most money and will protect the expensive body work on side of Jeep, Rusty's lower control arm skid protects what hits the most, hitch skid saves your bumper and gives a great attachment point, oil pan is important as stated it protects sensitive stuff but rarely hits, then shock and control arm skids and FAD.
My Mojave has RH shock skids, Rusty's control arm skids, Dana cast diff covers, Artec FAD skid, Skid Row exhaust loop skid (not installed yet), Warfab Sheridan hitch skid, Rubicon rear bed skids, and a Next Venture oil pan skid is in the mail. Next Venture now lets you buy the pieces to build the whole belly pan, so if I decide to go full belly later I can, although as I am such a poser and not wheeling that extreme the factory skids protect the bottom pretty good.
It is a good feeling when you hear thinks banging and scraping that you know you have your bottom protected., sort of the same feeling as having a winch on the front......Jack
 

Sponsored

jac04

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jeff
Joined
Apr 20, 2021
Threads
27
Messages
1,548
Reaction score
2,252
Location
CT
Vehicle(s)
2021 Mojave, 2014 JKRX SWB
The rocky east coast stuff can be tough. Sometimes you can pick the best line, and just when everything seems to be going fine, BAM!, the line picks you.

If you are OK with body damage, then don't worry too much about the factory Rubicon rock rails. They will take a beating, BUT they will flex up and hit the body when hit fairly hard. If you have no tolerance for body damage, then upgrade them immediately.

From there, look at the stuff that would leave you stranded if damaged.
- engine/trans skid
- exhaust loop skid
- diff pinion protection (if your diff skids don't already extend to protect the pinion areas)
 

Camaroboi13

Well-Known Member
First Name
Justin
Joined
Aug 22, 2022
Threads
13
Messages
1,810
Reaction score
2,904
Location
SoCal
Vehicle(s)
87 XJ Pioneer, 17 WK2 3.6, 18 JLU 3.6, 22 JTOD 3.0
Occupation
LEO - Life in Chino
We have used our bellypan more than sliders on our JT's
Just to verify for the jury… does Artec make bellypans or does Artec make sliders??? ? ?

free shameless plug ?
 

Artec

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 21, 2017
Threads
38
Messages
117
Reaction score
174
Location
North Salt Lake, Utah
Vehicle(s)
2014 JKU
Just to verify for the jury… does Artec make bellypans or does Artec make sliders??? ? ?

free shameless plug ?
Artec manufactures Vehicle Specfic Bumpers, Bellypans, Light Brackets, Fender liners, Axle trusses, Steering, and Aluminum Link kits As well as a bunch of DYI Builder parts

As for Sliders We did make some but we have recently discontinued the style we made an are currently testing out a new style along with Long arm with Triangulated rear

An since I know the question will pop up The Slider is 3/16" steel plate with a sacrificial 1/4" 6061 aluminum skin ;)

Jeep Gladiator under Armor in order of importance 8cca1c39-c771-49c0-afc3-45dca44e0a19
 

Camaroboi13

Well-Known Member
First Name
Justin
Joined
Aug 22, 2022
Threads
13
Messages
1,810
Reaction score
2,904
Location
SoCal
Vehicle(s)
87 XJ Pioneer, 17 WK2 3.6, 18 JLU 3.6, 22 JTOD 3.0
Occupation
LEO - Life in Chino
What are the cross bars in the bed? If they were sturdy enough to hold a tent, but low enough for a soft tonneau to go over, you’d peak my interest.
Sponsored

 
 







Top