carlosburitica wrote:
Found the thread. Looks like his setup is:
i did a research trying to find options for the front suspension and found that the problem is the clevis shock mount. it needs to be custom made like he did. for the top they already have convertion plates thac can be bolt on to the stock top mount
From the looks of it, he only installed those Fox extended reservoir shocks because they rode nice and had the better travel in the front. You can still mount 33"s without shocks that have a reserve resivour, you would just sacrifice some performance.
Boblemoche wrote:
well I should say that MY cost is 500$ less because Im fabbing the adapters my self for the front shocks. That would be at least 300$ at a machine shop but you could replace the reservoir shox with emulsion shox and save 220$ and still have 90% of the performance.
the real bummer with this kit is I dont think the stock axles will handle the 20% more travel and that is why I have new axles on the way. that will more than offset the cost difference but imho Its still a much better deal than the jba4
From the standpoint of how he stuck his 33"s on it looks like what would be required would be...
3"+ Lift (minimum)
JBA UCA's (to help reduce rub)
Extended Brake lines/cables
Wheel spacers or back-set wheels (Boblemoche went with 1.25" or 2" wheel spacers)
Flatten or cut the pinch weld in the front tire wheel wells (I think there's a how to somewhere around here)
Possibly remove plastic wheel well lining if there's rub (Boblemoche didn't, but everyone's setup is different)
Trim Front/Rear bumper (Boblemoche replaced his front/rear bumpers with steel ones that allowed more room in the wheel wells)
Re-gear to 4.11 or 4.56 (depending on if want better MPG or more Power)
http://www.alloyusa.com/gear-ratio-calculator/Oh, and 33's of your choosing. (Probably stick with 285/75/R16 BF Goodrich KM2's or GY Duratracs)