Panthers65
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Brent
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2021
- Threads
- 46
- Messages
- 574
- Reaction score
- 593
- Location
- Atlanta, GA
- Vehicle(s)
- NA
- Occupation
- Account Manager
That's exactly the point, it all depends on what you want out of the vehicle. I've worked on moon buggies, 4cy crawlers, big block rock bouncers, all the way to KOH and Baja trucks, and there is no 1 answer fits everything. I had a 80HP Samurai-based rock crawler on 40's that could idle up a vertical wall thanks to its gearing, but had a top speed of about 30mph, Had I had the factory gearing in that buggy I would be putting in a new clutch after every weekend trip. Worked on 1000HP 1ton built rigs running 44's on 4.10's that had been in service for years, no problems. There's a reason the old SM465 transmissions with the granny first gear were such monsters and everyone loved them.Well I personally think my Rubicon has plenty of power . I have pulled my big pop up and the bed of the jeep loaded down with camp gear and firewood up steep terrain dirt road even and it does fine.
Let me ask a question just how high of a gear do you want while ypur towing 3000 pounds up a steep dirt road ? 6th, 7th ,8th.. I will tell you what I think I think everyone just has different views of performance and power and how fast they want to go or how high of a gear they think they need to pull a load in
. Cheers.
Lower (numerically higher gears) reduce stress on the transmission in exchange for engine RPMs. The exact same Jeep on 40's will have less strain on it's transmission with 5.13's vs 4.10's, but it will run at a higher RPM with the exact same speed/transmission gear.
In your situation, pulling a trailer up a steep dirt hill, what would be BEST for the Jeep would be to drop it into 4lo and sit at about 2K all the way up the hill, that would put the least amount of stress on the Jeep, resulting in the lowest amount of heat in the transmission and keep the engine in the most efficient torque range. Depending on where you are, that may or may not be practical. Most people don't want to idle around everywhere they go, so compromising and trying to minimize stress/heat while having the jeep perform how you want it to
On small 37's (Closer to 35.75) 5.13's, and Jeeps .67 final OD gear; I'm running around 2400RPM at 75MPH. This is perfectly comfortable to me and as fast as I really have any desire to drive my Jeep. I really enjoy the deeper gears around town and at lower speeds, I feel like it reduces stress and heat on the Jeep in stop and go traffic and especially when I'm pulling my boat (5K+ when loaded up). It also puts the Torque right in line with the torque curve for the 3.6 as far as efficiency goes.
If my needs/driving style was different, I definitely would have considered a different gear ratio. Then again if I wanted a vehicle where I would primarily be doing 80+ MPH, a Jeep would probably be my last choice. At the end of the day we are driving bricks on wheels. No gearing will make up for the piss poor aerodynamics of a Jeep windshield.
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