Bdoza10
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Brett
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2024
- Threads
- 8
- Messages
- 102
- Reaction score
- 95
- Location
- California
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 jlu sport
- Build Thread
- Link
- Occupation
- Safe and Vault installer
- Thread starter
- #1
My now wife needed a commuter, and is pretty budget conscious. Starting with a little preloved sport, the cheapest one we could find with heated seats and a lifetime power train warranty (we always joked it would be something our future kids would end up driving). she used to eek 28mpg out of little thing commuting 45min each way everyday. At first we had modest plans to upgrade it (wheels, and a small lift) once she stopped commuting. Well 30,000 miles later and a new job quite literally across the street. I finally got the green light to start building our jeep.
It has since evolved into something to keep up with my parents and friends out in the desert. Most of which are in side by sides, or on dirt bikes mostly can am x3’s and a few rzrs. My wife used to keep up with them on her dirt bike but this desert season we were expecting the arrival of our first born. So my plan changed and i decided to turn her jeep into our prerunner that could keep up with our rather fast group.
At first it was just replacing what was worn out brakes, wheel bearing, adding “steps” is what she asked for…
First up was sliders off marketplace. I wanted her to find the limits of the lil sport safely and the bare pinch weld down low felt cheap. Best to cover that up with LOD Destroyers I found on marketplace for $300.
next her stock shocks had reached their due date. I was able to convince her a set of Mojave shocks in Arizona were worth the road trip. We ended up only paying $300 for a set of new take offs. The Mojave shocks had less than a 1000miles on them. The shocks are super easy to get on a wrangler. Just some bronze bushing from Amazon that I found on this forum and some washers in the rear to space them out. We have put over 10,000 miles on this set up beating the ever living snot out of it.
Getting the shocks on was super easy thanks to this forum. Also seeing how undervalued and misunderstood they were was also apparent.
Getting them to work well was a bit of a process. But our house hold motto is “trust the process”.
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