Lunentucker
Well-Known Member
The only real answer is to get a Mojave.
Sponsored
The big difference that canāt be affordably added is the transfer case. 4:1 low range changes things DRAMATICALLY.If your goal is to try and tackle tough obstacles and generally do 4 wheel drivey stuff then the lockers sound like the way to go. Personally I get attached to vehicles and if that time comes I'd just add the axles with lockers to my truck. I just couldn't trade it for another JT. Your truck is beautiful. I couldn't see parting with it. But since I use my truck to just explore and pull people out of ditches in snowstorms I probably won't ever need lockers. Doesn't mean I might not still get them though. ??
I think this is true if you rock crawl or if you go up steep slopes. I don't do the first and I rarely do the second. Most of my getting stuck is sand, gravel, snow or mud. Once you are spinning the tires I'm not sure that more torque is the answer. Better applied torque might be. Better traction certainly is.The big difference that canāt be affordably added is the transfer case. 4:1 low range changes things DRAMATICALLY.
I agree! The Mojave has lots of significant upgrades in strength and capability. Your JT may have significantly better trade-in as it sits vs. stock; find a good dealer and check out the value of your upgrades. In my case, I left most stuff on the 2020 JT but kept the Rock Hard rails which now cost $900 plus shipping.The only real answer is to get a Mojave.
very true, just walked up an obstacle 4 lane cruisers and a 4Runner were stuck diggin in on with their rear lockers.Many will say, and have said, just add lockers. I say drive a rubicon with the 4:1 transfer case and off road plus. Then make your decision. Itās truly night and day on rocks. Plus you can likely trade your sport and get much closer to the new one than the cost of lockers and gears. And to address the ālockers arenāt necessaryā viewpoint, Iāve personally been on several obstacles where they absolutely were. Meaning the rigs without them didnāt make it up those obstacles. It doesnāt happen often, but those obstacles exist without question. Your Jeep though. And its a very nice one.
Exactly. Or it pisses people off when terrible obstacles are so accessible. I let a friend of mine whoād never done any off road driving drive poison spider and top of the world while I spotted. He quickly realized that he could just point it in a direction and let it crawl. We got in a spot on the Sunday where we were a bit low on gas. My fault. I didnāt account for the distance to the trailhead. I did fill up before heading out that morning, but needed a few spare gallons. Whoops. So we turned off off-road plus to lower the rpmās. Only then did I truly realize the difference off-road plus makes for throttle control. Taking a Jeep with a 96-1 crawl ratio and just disabling off road plus made it a way different vehicle. Way less self-crawling or descent control. We still left it off so we could conserve some gas.very true, just walked up an obstacle 4 lane cruisers and a 4Runner were stuck diggin in on with their rear lockers.
sliding off obstacles trying to get traction sucks, and the 4:1 low range is amazing. So low it pisses people off waiting for me to crawl obstacles and just does it with ease.
yeah off road plus is amazing, though it can be a bit weird transitioning from high idle to a little brake and back.Exactly. Or it pisses people off when terrible obstacles are so accessible. I let a friend of mine whoād never done any off road driving drive poison spider and top of the world while I spotted. He quickly realized that he could just point it in a direction and let it crawl. We got in a spot on the Sunday where we were a bit low on gas. My fault. I didnāt account for the distance to the trailhead. I did fill up before heading out that morning, but needed a few spare gallons. Whoops. So we turned off off-road plus to lower the rpmās. Only then did I truly realize the difference off-road plus makes for throttle control. Taking a Jeep with a 96-1 crawl ratio and just disabling off road plus made it a way different vehicle. Way less self-crawling or descent control. We still left it off so we could conserve some gas.![]()
It might be on Mohaves. I donāt remember. But itās not on any other trim.yeah off road plus is amazing, though it can be a bit weird transitioning from high idle to a little brake and back.
Iāve used it the ghost ride it up some obstacles out with some crossovers that didnāt have the torque to full throttle up. Honestly didnāt realize it wasnāt on sports
for me, the 4:1 allows me to keep the 4.10 rear end with 35s and still have excellent control off road. I still have 8th on the freeway.
like you said, it basically auto crawls up stuff.
Hmm, it's hard to say, at the moment, I haven't 'needed' the things that the Rubicon offers over the Sport, I've gotten by on the same trail that I've been on with other Rubicon JT's. Some things have been a bit more difficult, but I haven't been stopped in my tracks. Usually a different line, a bypass, and on one occasion my winch were enough to get me through. BUT, I would like to be able try out some of the harder stuff, I feel like I'm slowly creeping towards the limit of what the truck can handle.You might be looking at this upside down...What exactly is your Sport (preventing, or making it difficult) for you to do out in the "wild" that would require you to get a Rubicon???
Youāre thinking clearly I think. Thereās a difference between making it through, and succeeding at tough lines without bypasses. If youāre after that, which happened to me, youāre on the right track.Hmm, it's hard to say, at the moment, I haven't 'needed' the things that the Rubicon offers over the Sport, I've gotten by on the same trail that I've been on with other Rubicon JT's. Some things have been a bit more difficult, but I haven't been stopped in my tracks. Usually a different line, a bypass, and on one occasion my winch were enough to get me through. BUT, I would like to be able try out some of the harder stuff, I feel like I'm slowly creeping towards the limit of what the truck can handle.
The lockers and 4:1 are my main reasons I'm looking at the Rubicons now. I'm not 100% on board with adding lockers to my axles when the Rubicon already has them built in with stronger housings to boot. There's the other route of putting in drop in options from Curie, Teraflex, etc. which would come with some nice upgrades like stronger knuckles and housings, but I'm keeping those on the bench for now. And I would still have to source/build a new tranfer case, and I'm not on board with dropping the cash for something like an Atlas. Off-road plus is another thing that I wouldn't be able to add.
Then there would be other things that would come with the Rubicon upgrade, mostly the nicer interior trim, leather, a 8.4 radio upgrade thrown in, and the hood. But those would be a bonus if I went trade in route.
One last thing, insurance! It's a lot easier to explain to my agent that I would like to insure a Rubicon JT vs a Sport JT with custom axles, driveline, etc.
Many will say, and have said, just add lockers. I say drive a rubicon with the 4:1 transfer case and off road plus. Then make your decision. Itās truly night and day on rocks. Plus you can likely trade your sport and get much closer to the new one than the cost of lockers and gears. And to address the ālockers arenāt necessaryā viewpoint, Iāve personally been on several obstacles where they absolutely were. Meaning the rigs without them didnāt make it up those obstacles. It doesnāt happen often, but those obstacles exist without question. Your Jeep though. And its a very nice one.