Thspittingllama
Member
- Location
- Taylorsville
I still dont understand everyones HATE for body lifts. Now that said..... theyre are limits and trade offs with one sure. I have been runnng a 2'' body lift on my pickup with 33/12.5's for years! I wouldn't recoment anything bigger though for sure! When i did it, i needed clearence to fit a set that was given to me for free! i was broke and needed a cheap fix. i found the 2'' body lift for $80 plus shipping from 4wheel parts. it was easy to install and did the job i needed. I would do it again honestly! i have not lost anything that i have missed by putting this lift on! I run this truck as an everyday driver and with the removed sway bars and body lift, i can still get off the I15n to 215w off ramp at 75mph without feeling sketched out! what more really do you need for drivability? honestly? i have also never had any creaks or clunks from it either. maybe because it was installed right idk?, and my lift came with a new gas filler neck and brackets to raise my front bumper.
Now although the suspention is limited to the stock flex and capabilitys, its tough as nails, and takes a beating like a redheaded stepchild! (except for the idler arms, THEY SUCK) Now dont get me wrong a properly set up suspention system is ideal, but rome wasnt built in a day. and once i get the lift i really want it will come off. But when on a budget like me, you want to get the most bang for the buck! And still have a capable machine. Now trimming and massaging to fit is anouther way to do it, and steve did an amazing job on his! but most peaple just arent comfortable doing that themselves, or at all really. maye because once its done there's almost no going back, idk. Im not against that either, but it looked like alot of work, and you need acces to a welder. Not to say that a body lift is always the right answer or anything, but don't count them out either! They do have a place on the trail, dont believe me?.... then lets go wheelin! lol If you want to hate any type of lift, id say point and laugh at the bracket lifts! those are the real wrong way to do's. hahaha. In my opinion of capability and proformance of a trail rig in rough order of importance is.....
1. ground clearence, even an ich helps, but this increase is all but useless at a certain point where othe vehicle limitations prohibit any further gain.
2. tires, this can be a dual purpose gain of not only traction but ground clearence.
3. LOCKERS!!!!!!! even if its just a cheep spooly in the front only. (my friend had this in his 4runner in high scool and went every where)I went with a selectable in the rear and a true trac in the front, because it is my everyday driver. but this is one of the biggest jumps in capability! the sooner you can do it the better.
4. gears, not only in the diffs, but the transfercase as well.
5. Armor, with the ability to get into uglier places the danger of rock rash and tril damage greatly increases! (obviously)
6. then suspention!
7. power to take it to a whole new level.
I believe this to be the ideal way to get the greatest increases at every step. Nocking out the cheapest first, and progressively getting more expensive. I think a locked, armor'd, and geared truck on stock suspention would be way more capable than a truck with only suspention. and in most cases the first can be done for the same cost as the second, if not cheaper.
(sorry for the rant) im really board at work today!
Now although the suspention is limited to the stock flex and capabilitys, its tough as nails, and takes a beating like a redheaded stepchild! (except for the idler arms, THEY SUCK) Now dont get me wrong a properly set up suspention system is ideal, but rome wasnt built in a day. and once i get the lift i really want it will come off. But when on a budget like me, you want to get the most bang for the buck! And still have a capable machine. Now trimming and massaging to fit is anouther way to do it, and steve did an amazing job on his! but most peaple just arent comfortable doing that themselves, or at all really. maye because once its done there's almost no going back, idk. Im not against that either, but it looked like alot of work, and you need acces to a welder. Not to say that a body lift is always the right answer or anything, but don't count them out either! They do have a place on the trail, dont believe me?.... then lets go wheelin! lol If you want to hate any type of lift, id say point and laugh at the bracket lifts! those are the real wrong way to do's. hahaha. In my opinion of capability and proformance of a trail rig in rough order of importance is.....
1. ground clearence, even an ich helps, but this increase is all but useless at a certain point where othe vehicle limitations prohibit any further gain.
2. tires, this can be a dual purpose gain of not only traction but ground clearence.
3. LOCKERS!!!!!!! even if its just a cheep spooly in the front only. (my friend had this in his 4runner in high scool and went every where)I went with a selectable in the rear and a true trac in the front, because it is my everyday driver. but this is one of the biggest jumps in capability! the sooner you can do it the better.
4. gears, not only in the diffs, but the transfercase as well.
5. Armor, with the ability to get into uglier places the danger of rock rash and tril damage greatly increases! (obviously)
6. then suspention!
7. power to take it to a whole new level.
I believe this to be the ideal way to get the greatest increases at every step. Nocking out the cheapest first, and progressively getting more expensive. I think a locked, armor'd, and geared truck on stock suspention would be way more capable than a truck with only suspention. and in most cases the first can be done for the same cost as the second, if not cheaper.
(sorry for the rant) im really board at work today!
Last edited: