WILDHOBO
Well-Known Member
Is there a chart somewhere with toe recommendations based on tire size and other variables?I shoot for 1/8 inch of toe-in at the tire diameter.
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Is there a chart somewhere with toe recommendations based on tire size and other variables?I shoot for 1/8 inch of toe-in at the tire diameter.
Excuse my ignorance. Don’t you just subtract the front from the rear to get your toe in measurement?I'm running 35's, I set the toe at ~17 1/2 inches out from center on my toe-bars. 37's I'd go out to ~18 1/2 inches from center.
Yes, but you need to take the measurements at equal distances from the center. Also much easier to use a toe-bar (I made mine out of 90 angle aluminum. Set up and drilled holes in the angle stock to attach the bars to the hubs via wheel studs, centered on the hubs, then mark the tire diameter on the bars.) I set the bars level in reference to the driveway, and take the measurements and adjust.Excuse my ignorance. Don’t you just subtract the front from the rear to get your toe in measurement?
The one I should of kept was my 2006 TJ Unlimited.Love the cj. Mine had plenty of rust as well. I should have kept it and replaced the tub. Oh well. Hindsight. It goes both ways though. The jeeps today are way safer, on the road and off. A serious rollover with the cj roll bar attached to the tub instead of the frame wasn’t exactly awesome. And the windshield would crumple like a tin can. The new ones put you in a situation to number one have less chances of rolling, and if you do, you’ll like have bumps and bruises.i wouldn’t wheel hard trails in a cj with my kids in the back. I don’t hesitate in these.
As soon as I finish swapping the gears in the front axle of my motorhome on F550 chassis this week, I’m going to put my Gladiator on the lift and check the toe. Even with the AEV lift and 37 inch tires I have not changed anything in the front that would change the toe with stock tires since I haven’t touched the tie rod, so going to get a baseline that I will use going forward on my Gladiator. I have always used 1/8” on my Jeeps, but with the new Gladiator I have the opportunity to compare my standard measurement to the stock toe with larger tires.Is there a chart somewhere with toe recommendations based on tire size and other variables?
Luckily, I never fell into that trap. We still have our '05 TJ that we have owned since new.The one I should of kept was my 2006 TJ Unlimited.
While it had over 100K miles on it, it was still going strong.
While having it serviced at a Jeep dealer I did the dumb thing of looking at a new JK. The rest is history.![]()
Nothing is Cheap for a JT? For a sport to get to 37's up front: 2 inch spacers on some take away rubi springs and one inch rear and add some used rubi flares that sub $800
25 years ago you couldn't do 36's on a TJ for under $2k
Traction on a sport you could get used rubicon axles and plug and play and if you want to go cheap you can add twin lunch box lockers $400 each (Aussi locker for a TJ in 04 was $350
Stock parts are cheaper now not just comparatively! a parts store TJ rotor bottom barrel, if there was event a choice, was around $75-120 (i worked in a parts store in the late 90's)
a 2023 JT rock auto you can get one as cheap as $29
Drilled black and sloted $129
The quality of parts has also risen ... 25 years ago you made your own sliders and tube doors only rich kids bought them at a shop
lucky guys had a garage to do work most if best had a drivway ...
I did my first sprung over on Zuk in a gravel drive with the tools I had
back then the bolt ons just didn't exist ...
I learned it form the hot rod article "Straight as a string" hot road or maybe carcraftThat’s very impressive. What’s your method for axle center measurement? I can get close, but not perfect. Any suggestions are appreciated. I have brackets for toe measurement and shoot for 1/16” toe in. Is that what you’d shoot for? Thanks.
I have toe bars. I rotate them up to touch the rear of the caliper on both sides, that way they’re in the same position on both rotors. What’s the significance of the tire diameter?Yes, but you need to take the measurements at equal distances from the center. Also much easier to use a toe-bar (I made mine out of 90 angle aluminum. Set up and drilled holes in the angle stock to attach the bars to the hubs via wheel studs, centered on the hubs, then mark the tire diameter on the bars.) I set the bars level in reference to the driveway, and take the measurements and adjust.
That ship sailed a while ago for me. I’m on my second aftermarket tie rod.As soon as I finish swapping the gears in the front axle of my motorhome on F550 chassis this week, I’m going to put my Gladiator on the lift and check the toe. Even with the AEV lift and 37 inch tires I have not changed anything in the front that would change the toe with stock tires since I haven’t touched the tie rod, so going to get a baseline that I will use going forward on my Gladiator. I have always used 1/8” on my Jeeps, but with the new Gladiator I have the opportunity to compare my standard measurement to the stock toe with larger tires.
before the Rubicon... there was no store bought optionYou make some great points, especially about how certain individual parts really are cheaper now than they were 25 years ago. I agree with that. But when it comes to Rubicon axles being "plug and play" or inexpensive, I just don’t think that lines up with reality for most people. I'd challenge you to find a set of Rubicon axles for less than $5,000.
Sure, someone might get lucky on Facebook Marketplace or Craigslist. But more often than not, those “cheap” Rubicon axles are priced like they are made of gold. The idea of just grabbing some used parts and bolting them on sounds simple, but in practice, it is rarely that easy. Most people are not interested in spending weeks messaging sellers who all think their worn-out parts are worth top dollar.
And when it comes to running 37s on a Gladiator Sport, it takes a lot more than just a spacer lift and some flares to do it right. You need to account for re-gearing at the very least if you are going to put a Sport on 37's. Doing a proper upgrade shouldn't leave you with poor drivability or wondering if you're going to make it over a feature when you're out at the park because you aren't sure your axles can handle the strain your causing with those 37s. When you add up the real cost of doing it right, especially if you are not doing all the work yourself, you often end up spending more than just buying a Rubicon to begin with.
I still respect the DIY mindset. I have done my fair share of wrenching in a gravel driveway too. But what has changed is that the value of building it yourself has gone down. There are fewer good deals, it is harder to find people to help, and even though some parts cost less, putting together a capable and reliable build is not as simple or affordable as it used to be.
I sort of understand what you’re getting at, but it’s not clicking. Can you at some point when you have time take some pictures of the setup?I learned it form the hot rod article "Straight as a string" hot road or maybe carcraft
Use magnets or tape a string over the leading edge of the fenders with a plumb or large nut at the end and a straight edge to center track width or center a solid axle
this can also alond with a magnet angle finder give you camber on a car
Take cross measurements WMS to WMS front to rear to have 4 wheel alignment
magnet straight edge each wheel and measure
Center wheel take your kid that owes you the most in chores promise to cancel them and a free Ice cream... it will be dead on center
I want to click all the emojis on this oneHonestly - yes it's too easy... All the comments here have covered the topic well.
I'd add that yes things have changed with technology and mechanicals. As an (old) schooled/experienced aviator, systems, logistics, and IT engineer RVer, Jeeper, classic car guy the off-roading knowledge of new Jeepers (technical driving skills) is limited, but videos and trail experience get them up more quickly than the old days.
Repair/technical knowledge is more lacking across the group with built, turn-key, fully warrantied capable Jeep (e.g.) Rubicons/ Mojaves (and others) - BUT - but as evidenced on this forum and other Jeep forums, that (thankfully) there are PLENTY but (regretfully) seemingly too few wrench-turners out there.
There is a clear weekend difference between the classic car hobby and offroading. Restoring classics, driving, enjoying, showing and polishing them is great (NO mechanical carnage).
But with Jeeping/offroading - you hope to return home un-dented/un-scraped, mechanically intact with no costly mechanical breakage/damage, under own power, and without a trailer. And you ideally go out on off-roading trips with someone (several ideally) in the group trailering their Jeeps, as a trailer option backup in case a Jeep(s) ends up non-roadworthy. Rule is you drive their Jeep home and pay for all the gas to graciously compensate for the friendly "recovery service."
Also fortuitous to have folks in the wilderness with steel and portable welders, if a frame/suspension component cracks on vintage Jeeps...
The current state of modern vehicles makes this logistics/sustainment experienced guy cringe with the demise of the KISS rule of thumb (Keep It Simple Stupid).
And if you've never been nose-high stalled on the some rocky hillside in an old-school CJ-5 carbureted V-8 (at high altitude), 3-Speed manual, manual drum brakes ---you can't fully appreciate the joy of modern vehicles - or haven't lived (or nearly died?)!
Driving an airconditioned modern Jeep in the wilderness is a surreal experience. But taking off your doors/roof and breathing trail dust can simulate the old Jeep experience - to a degree
Our current flat-tow Jeep fleet technology ranges from old, to modern, to stupid modern :
1) My built "farm tractor/death machine" '74 AMC Jeep CJ-5 w/ 304 V-8, T-18A (granny), crude but tough Detroit Lockers, roll caged/harnessed, lifted jeep on 33's, (followed by later sold '02 built TJ (pre-Rubicon)),
2) Wife's (Anniversary gift, replaced the TJ) '17 JKUR Recon w/winch on a MOPAR lift and 35's with a no longer avail lifetime warranty, and
3) Wife's recently acquired (bad knees) un-lifted (but for 10.5 35's) winch equipped '24 JT Rubicon X
All of above are RV flat tows - the CJ-5 was our first flat tow w/unique rear Warn manual hubs (no longer sold) on full-floater Dana 44 axle.
Enjoy the Gladiator --- off-road too!