Some vehicle manufactures use tires with more shallow tread depths that are lighter weight to help with MPG’s. There was a motor trend article not too long ago comparing an OEM all terrain vs an identical off the shelf tire and the OEM tread depth was not as deep as a regular tire. Just...
Pulled the aux battery, taped up the ends and pulled the F42 fuse. Problem solved. Luckily I have the diesel and it’s super easy to get to the aux battery.
It’s a 2021. Haven’t gotten around to checking the main yet, going to stop by autozone this week and have it tested. If the main is bad I plan on replacing it but would still rather just disconnect the aux system. I’ve had it turned off since the day I got my Jeep and installed the tazer.
I recently started getting the AUX switches not available battery charging warning on each start up. I want to try pull the fuse and disconnecting the aux battery, just not sure which cable is the correct one to pull. Can anyone respond with a picture to help me out? My Jeep is an Ecodiesel. Thanks
It’s just new shocks right? Springs and bump stops are left unchanged? My non rubi didn’t qualify for the TSB so I fixed it in the mean time until I went with a lift. Also what I think helped too was the addition of the metalcloak durospring front bump stops.
I have a set of the diesel Clayton springs that help fix the issue I can sell you. Those along with a 3/4 spacer eliminated my bottoming out issue. PM me if you’re interested. Can’t see why they would deny your TSB with such a minor modification.
I don’t own any and have never been in a situation that I felt I would need them in my 15+ years of off-roading. That said, if I didn’t have a winch and I was off-roading alone then they would probably be worth having just in case.
I have the Baja Designs reverse lights and am very happy with them.
https://www.jeepgladiatorforum.com/forum/threads/installed-baja-designs-dual-reverse-lights.74041/
There is an HPR diesel station I fill up at sometimes in Claremont. My Jeep seems to like it.
“The Benefits of Diesel HPR
Fueling with Diesel HPR
Propel Diesel HPR is a premium fuel engineered to maximize performance of your clean diesel engine. Diesel HPR meets the ASTM D975 diesel...
I would prefer to buy a Jeep without wheels and tires at a discounted price. Then I wouldn’t have to bother with the stock ones after immediately swapping to something else.
I have been using their oil and fuel filters since my third oil change when my Jeep Wave ran out. I've been doing oil every 5k and fuel every 10K. I'm at 41xxx miles and have not had any issues so far. Also just started using their cabin air filters as well.
Just got 5 of these mounted and balanced for about 2k. Not a great deal or anything but I needed new tires and these are great so far. Have about 500 miles on them including a Death Valley trip and some rain and I am very happy with them. I have them mounted on Mojave wheels and with no issues.