Vtur
Well-Known Member
And you guys be saying gen Z are soft? What happened to going on adventures, off roading, getting lost in the wilderness and stuffs? Can't do that with all those gps gadgets 
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Of all of the 4.0s I've had, I've been lucky.The crank shaft position sensor on the 4.0L was a common failure point and the thing wouldn't start or run without one. I even had a pcm fail on an XJ. The idea that a failure that leaves your vehicle undriveable is a new thing is flat wrong. Parts fail, and some aren't bush fixable. As others have said, be prepared to survive and/or make it out without the vehicle because you never know. We've left Jeeps on the trail multiple times and hiked out. Come back the next day or even next weekend with parts. Failures can happen anywhere and if you're wheeling hard they are more likely.
Its a completely custom bumper build by a fab shop for him, however it would be easy enough to replicate with some C channel steel.what rear bumper is on that JL. I want to see if it fits JTs
Over the last 40 years, I have spent a lot of time in the mountains and desert on dirt bikes and in Jeeps, long before the emergence of electronics. During that time, I have been first on scene for 19 motorcycle riders who have been put on Life Flight. In addition, I have stumbled on a host of others in 4 wheeled vehicles who are lost, stuck or broken down and in need of help.And you guys be saying gen Z are soft? What happened to going on adventures, off roading, getting lost in the wilderness and stuffs? Can't do that with all those gps gadgets![]()
Also, don't let a sole piece of equipment be your savior, redundancy in systems is keyIn this day and age, if you're not carrying some kind of GPS rescue beacon when you go far enough out that you could die if stuck, then your death is solely on you.
Equipment failure is a risk in every outdoor activity. It up to you to be prepared
This right here. A Garmin w/ satellite messaging and SOS capability is dirt cheap compared to a Jeep. Last I checked, Im paying something like 15/month for comms and 30/year for medical airlift insurance through Garmin.In this day and age, if you're not carrying some kind of GPS rescue beacon when you go far enough out that you could die if stuck, then your death is solely on you.
Equipment failure is a risk in every outdoor activity. It up to you to be prepared
Mine failed on the XJ but it was in my driveway. Drove home from work, the next day it wouldn't start.The crank shaft position sensor on the 4.0L was a common failure point and the thing wouldn't start or run without one. I even had a pcm fail on an XJ. The idea that a failure that leaves your vehicle undriveable is a new thing is flat wrong. Parts fail, and some aren't bush fixable. As others have said, be prepared to survive and/or make it out without the vehicle because you never know. We've left Jeeps on the trail multiple times and hiked out. Come back the next day or even next weekend with parts. Failures can happen anywhere and if you're wheeling hard they are more likely.
Agree, Always be prepared to self rescue…I wheel alone more often than in a group
How is wheel changes.
Is that mud hole really really needed to be traversed or can I skirt around it?
If I have to go though do I have trees or other hard points in reach to winch?
I never "just send it" alone.
I wade into it on foot first alone (even if I was there last week. Because often some Yahoo with 50s dug it out since I was last thru)
And always have a call for help method. Sat phone if u r really remote. Mostly I track where I last had cell coverage. More than 3 miles back to cell service... no bogs for me. I don't want to walk that far