Gabbman
Member
- First Name
- Chris
- Joined
- May 6, 2018
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 7
- Reaction score
- 17
- Location
- New Jersey
- Vehicle(s)
- 2016 Range Rover
- Thread starter
- #61
That’s sooooo true. I didn’t think and still don’t know why I enjoy driving through 2 feet of mud or over rocks. But I do !!!! Never made sense to me until I did itI'd agree if we were talking about Subaru Outbacks and the difference of whether to spring for the "wilderness" trim level or stick to something a little less expensive. It's an Outback, and it's got a finite amount of capability regardless of how much you like to go out on dirt roads.
The dilemma with Gladiators is that a driver can easily get to a point where they can outperform the hardware in a non-Rubicon, and getting a Gladiator to Rubicon capability is always cheaper if you do it from the factory (as opposed to Jeeps of yester-generation, which were regularly a wash if not cheaper on the DIY side).
it's impossible to know if you are going to be a mall-crawler or a "lets get the dogs in the back and head to Utah" type until you get in the thing and start going. I personally find it addictive, so I traded up for a Rubicon because I got stuck with open diffs and bottomed out one too many times after a dozen visits to Windrock and having to put too much effort into determining which trails were "easy enough" for my Gladiator Sport.
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