What gears would you recommend?It's the 5:13's
Terrible mistake
I see you're in Texas, is it mostly flat out there where you wheel? No rock cliffs and the like?bought it that way
4.10s in a JK with .83-1 top gear is a final drive ratio on the highway/freeway of 3.403-1. With the 8 speeds double overdrive and 5.13 gears you get a final drive ratio of 3.437. That's a negligible difference that would have 0 effect on mpg or driveability. Given the OP has 37s the .03 deeper gearing would help more than it hurts. It's not a gearing problem it's moving a heavy brick with terrible aero stock made far worse by lift and tires through the wind. It will never be good fuel economy period. Sure you can make it better with smaller tires but then what's the point of owning a Jeep?I see you're in Texas, is it mostly flat out there where you wheel? No rock cliffs and the like?
13'S are pretty steep for a truck that spends the majority of time on the road.
Running the consistant higher rpm's on the road really suck the gas down.
I put Mopar crate axles in my '12 Wrangler sport(on 35's) and because the majority of use was on the street, I figured I'd try the 4.10's before switching gears and they worked out good. We do no rock crawling, mostly all old fire trails and timber/logging roads with a few trips to Rausch Creek from time to time and the 4.10 with lockers have been fine, never encountered anything we couldn't navigate.
I do not think I would go above 4.56's for a mainly pavement machine, just my opinion.
I just bought a 2020 Gladiator Launch Rubicon and plan on leaving the 10's in there as well, because this baby will see wayyyy less offroad time that the Wrangler. Starting with 35's and see how that goes.
I like 4.10's for a mostly street driver, again, just my opinion.
east tx. Is not really flat There’s a few places around. More trail stuff than rocks.I see you're in Texas, is it mostly flat out there where you wheel? No rock cliffs and the like?
13'S are pretty steep for a truck that spends the majority of time on the road.
Running the consistant higher rpm's on the road really suck the gas down.
I put Mopar crate axles in my '12 Wrangler sport(on 35's) and because the majority of use was on the street, I figured I'd try the 4.10's before switching gears and they worked out good. We do no rock crawling, mostly all old fire trails and timber/logging roads with a few trips to Rausch Creek from time to time and the 4.10 with lockers have been fine, never encountered anything we couldn't navigate.
I do not think I would go above 4.56's for a mainly pavement machine, just my opinion.
I just bought a 2020 Gladiator Launch Rubicon and plan on leaving the 10's in there as well, because this baby will see wayyyy less offroad time that the Wrangler. Starting with 35's and see how that goes.
I like 4.10's for a mostly street driver, again, just my opinion.
I probably would have gone 4.56, or 88's if I was determined to regear.
Our problem is the damn 3.6, we need a hemi
I think I’ll be happy with it. I might look at diesel for my next one.I feel like a 5.13 and 40's play well together for street and trail.
When you are discussing good fuel economy and either 40 or 5.13 is mentioned you are really grabbing at straws.
The 3.0 diesel would be your solution.
This ^^^The 3.0 diesel would be your solution.