- Location
- South Carolina....no public land
Greetings,
I'll try to add info as I go through this process. Unfortunately, I already got the x-member installed without any photos.
This kit is a first generation Rubicon Express xtreme duty longarm kit. I purchased the x-member, the rear control arms (4), the rear track bar and various hardware from a guy who built himself a custom suspension kit. He had already sold the front control arms with his axle, so I had RockLogic build me some front control arms off of measurements I took. With this kit, the x-member is a single piece unit, rather than the 3 piece they are currently selling.
First thing I had to do was block up the tranny and remove the stock x-member. This was easy as I have done it half dozen times already.
Next is to prepare the frame for the RE x-member. This requires drilling four 1" holes on the bottom side of the frame, and four 1/2" holes on the top side of the frame. This allows 4 extra bolts to be used to bolt the x-member on. The 4 additional bolts are drilled mid-way between the existing holes on the frame.
Drillling the 1" hole was easy, I measured for placement, then broke out the old hole saw. No problem. Getting the holes drilled in the top of the frame was a bit of a different story, although not terribly difficult.
The big problem here is making it so the bolt can fit between the body and the frame. The x-member has a nut welded to it, so the bolt has to fit through the top of the frame to thread into the x-member. Luckily, I have a 1" body lift, so that helps.
Drilling the initial hole in the top of the frame simply required a long enough 1/2" bit. Now for the fun part, getting the bolt to fit.
For the forward bolts I was able to use my hole saw and drill right through the floorboard just in front of the seats. This allows me to drop the bolt through the floorboard and into the hole.
I couldn't do this with the rear bolts though. the construction of the area above the bolt hole is too complex to simply cut a hole through. So, I drilled an additional hole in the frame next to the first hole, then used a series of files to make a slot. This allows just enough room to angle the bolt through the slot, then position it to tighten. Works pretty good, I now need to go out and purchase the proper length bolts. (the one I used to check my work is just a tad short for full thread engagement).
That's the install of the x-member. It uses 6 factory bolt locations and 4 additional bolting locations.
I'll try to add info as I go through this process. Unfortunately, I already got the x-member installed without any photos.
This kit is a first generation Rubicon Express xtreme duty longarm kit. I purchased the x-member, the rear control arms (4), the rear track bar and various hardware from a guy who built himself a custom suspension kit. He had already sold the front control arms with his axle, so I had RockLogic build me some front control arms off of measurements I took. With this kit, the x-member is a single piece unit, rather than the 3 piece they are currently selling.
First thing I had to do was block up the tranny and remove the stock x-member. This was easy as I have done it half dozen times already.
Next is to prepare the frame for the RE x-member. This requires drilling four 1" holes on the bottom side of the frame, and four 1/2" holes on the top side of the frame. This allows 4 extra bolts to be used to bolt the x-member on. The 4 additional bolts are drilled mid-way between the existing holes on the frame.
Drillling the 1" hole was easy, I measured for placement, then broke out the old hole saw. No problem. Getting the holes drilled in the top of the frame was a bit of a different story, although not terribly difficult.
The big problem here is making it so the bolt can fit between the body and the frame. The x-member has a nut welded to it, so the bolt has to fit through the top of the frame to thread into the x-member. Luckily, I have a 1" body lift, so that helps.
Drilling the initial hole in the top of the frame simply required a long enough 1/2" bit. Now for the fun part, getting the bolt to fit.
For the forward bolts I was able to use my hole saw and drill right through the floorboard just in front of the seats. This allows me to drop the bolt through the floorboard and into the hole.
I couldn't do this with the rear bolts though. the construction of the area above the bolt hole is too complex to simply cut a hole through. So, I drilled an additional hole in the frame next to the first hole, then used a series of files to make a slot. This allows just enough room to angle the bolt through the slot, then position it to tighten. Works pretty good, I now need to go out and purchase the proper length bolts. (the one I used to check my work is just a tad short for full thread engagement).
That's the install of the x-member. It uses 6 factory bolt locations and 4 additional bolting locations.