nickjaynes
Active Member
- First Name
- Nick
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2020
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 25
- Reaction score
- 30
- Location
- Portland, Oregon
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Jeep Gladiator Rubicon
- Thread starter
- #1
I recently had a bunch of things upgraded on my 2020 Gladiator Rubicon the other week (I'll list below). As soon as I got in it, pulled it down into Drive and hit the throttle, it felt like there was a drag in the driveline (at least that's how I perceive it) akin to the e-brake being on slightly (I checked, it's not). The drag I perceive continues on the highway; it takes more throttle to keep it up to freeway speed than it did before.
Existing parts:
I returned to the shop the next day and had them drive it and throw it on the rack again. I looked under it with them, too. No brakes dragging. E-brake cable was free and not bound up. I've been testing it myself, and I believe the "drag," as I call it, disappears if I pop the transmission into Neutral.
Of course, it's so slight, it's hard to say for sure. But I think so.
Anyone have any idea what could be going on? I can't think of what would have changed to cause this drag. They aligned it first with a measuring tape before driving it over to a shop for a laser alignment. The front and rear axles are within one degree of each other, side to side. There is plenty of camber, so I don't believe the front wheels are fighting themselves.
Doesn't seem feasible that the drive shaft could be stretched too far with only 2.5 inches of lift, especially given the fact these new components should have given it better geometry. I can't imagine a carrier bearing being suddenly bad at 17,000 miles on the vehicle. I am at a loss.
Ideas?
Existing parts:
- 2.5-inch Clayton Off-road lift springs
- Teraflex Falcon 3.3 shocks
- MOPAR 2-inch lift components (previous lift kit): lower control arms and anti-sway bar links
- Yeti tie rod
- Yeti XD drag link
- Yeti XD track bar
- Clayton Off-Road control arms (8 control arms)
I returned to the shop the next day and had them drive it and throw it on the rack again. I looked under it with them, too. No brakes dragging. E-brake cable was free and not bound up. I've been testing it myself, and I believe the "drag," as I call it, disappears if I pop the transmission into Neutral.
Of course, it's so slight, it's hard to say for sure. But I think so.
Anyone have any idea what could be going on? I can't think of what would have changed to cause this drag. They aligned it first with a measuring tape before driving it over to a shop for a laser alignment. The front and rear axles are within one degree of each other, side to side. There is plenty of camber, so I don't believe the front wheels are fighting themselves.
Doesn't seem feasible that the drive shaft could be stretched too far with only 2.5 inches of lift, especially given the fact these new components should have given it better geometry. I can't imagine a carrier bearing being suddenly bad at 17,000 miles on the vehicle. I am at a loss.
Ideas?
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