thats simply the law. Nobody asked for your disrespectful bullshit.
Your warranty/policies can not be void for aftermarket parts. Unless those parts played fault in your accident. If you knowingly or negligently use improper parts, and they cause the problem, your warranty pretty much goes out...
My rough understanding is that wranglers are fitted with load range C tires and gladiators are with LT/E(light truck).
The dealer i bought my gladiator from had a full set of wrangler rubicon take offs for sale on the floor, but said they would not sell or install them for me because it would...
Gladiator wheels are indeed heavier and stronger because they are designed to carry more weight. especially for towing purposes. Furthermore, when jeep mounts tires to these wheels, the wrangler versions come with lower load range tires(same tire style, different load rating).
If you got into a...
I feel like you shoulda just bought the rubicon with the type of changes u have made lol.
I also bought an overland a week ago- upgraded to launch edition black wheels and falkens, rubicon fox suspension, 1.5 in terraflex leveling, tinted windows, blacked out grille and bumper bezels...
I think you are all wrong....... lol
(granted I barely read this thread because it just sounds like toddlers fighting over who’s chocolate milk tastes better)
And mines better than all yours. (Just having fun)
granted I’ve only had it a week so not complete yet.
I bought an overland 1 week ago and this is my progress so far:
- Launch edition black wheels w/wild peaks
-swap upgrade for rubicon suspension + fox shocks(wayyyy better handling)
-1.5” terraflex kit
- blacked out grille and bumper bezels(formerly silver/billet)
- tint-70 front, 40 drivers, 35...
The dealership told me that the wheels and the tires for the wranglers should not be installed on the gladiator because of weight ratings and classes as they do differ.
it may not be any real issue, but It’d be a nightmare if a tire popped and caused a significant wreck, because insurance...