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When I'm banging the heck out of my skids I'm never going more than 1-2mph,is that still to fast?The stock skids are really a joke(tranny skid being #1),the front skid and gas tank skid are good to a point.Sorry I use my KJ like many others here do and you need better built skids that will support the whole wieght of the KJ,the only factory skid that will do that is the front skid(only the older one's with the extra bracing and 4 bolt holes).Also according to your sig you have modified skids yourself,what's that about?Oh be thae way good work on the skid mods Jeger,looking good enough to take some abuse!
Thanks for lookin at my rig.
Listen, this is just a discussion so don't get offended. My point is this... Skid plates are made to skid/slide over an obstacle. Your damage is simply NOT conducive to skidding. Something round and very hard did the damage to your undercarriage and did it at relative high speed. That's just my observation from years of wheelin'.
As far as MY custom fabbed skid goes, I built it because I cut that little "skirt" off of my lower front bumper and I noticed how visible the underside of my front axle housing was, not to mention my factory wiring harness lume, and thin subframe/core support.
If you were a rock, what would you hit?! If it's visible, it's hit-able, especially with a rock or fallen/leaning stump. In making this skid, I took off the motor skid at a welding shop so I could drill it and mount some nuts to the backside. That way, if necessary, I or any shop could remove the skidplate simply without removing anything else. In drilling the factory cold rolled metal skid plate, the welder broke 2 tungsten carbide tipped bits and burned up a 3rd to no avail. These skid plates start as cold roled flat plate, heated, stamped while hot then quickly dipped in cold cold liquid. This process tempers it to an unreal strength unmatched by anything of similar thickness. Heating it to a very high temperature "softens it". Unfortunately we had to blow through with a torch and weld the nuts on the backside. On the other hand, we only heated it on the short side of the bend (forward facing edge) which kept the portion protecting the primary vulnerability (belly) still very strong. To make a long story short (or longer, whichever), I will complete it when I get my bumper finished.
I know there are exceptions and freak accidents happen. I just saw your pics and mentally pictured you coming down from a small jump and landing on a horizontal pole or post. I hope you don't sacrifice too much ground clearance by mounting that angle on there.
Thanks for the conversation,
Matt
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05 Black "RUBI-GADE"
MOABs w/ MTRs
Rusty's 2.5 lift
Al J's Gen4 Upper Control Arms
Custom front skid
Rusty's rear diff guard
Super Sliders by Screamin Lizard
ARB Air lockers!!
Cut my teeth in a CJ-5
"It's less the Machine and more the Operator."
http://www.cardomain.com/ride/2591493