Darkhorse24
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I’ve owned my 4G for about 3 weeks and have been sitting on a few upgrades (purchased and in my garage, begging for a few days off to build). I am on the fence about doing a leveling kit or just a low lift (2.5-3”) with a few different brands like ReadyLift, RC, Eibach, etc. While I am far from a new off-roader, having come from the JL Wrangler with a 6” lift on 37/12.5R17 and about $24k in upgrades from big brands like TeraFlex, Stinger, Artec. KC, ICON, etc, I am learning how to transition from solid axles to IFS.
So this is the problem: I am a bit “sensitive” when it comes to motion sickness (organ transplant recipient and 3x cancer survivor… only 43yo). While I completely understand SUVs and trucks ride differently, I partly blame the PCS (pre-collision) but more so when I deactivate it, it doesn’t seem to change the outcome. Would anyone have an idea if simply going to taller and softer springs a/o shocks help this or is there another trick to making the ride feel more “overland” rather than stiff like a rock crawler. It’s ironic since my Wrangler was built for trails, mud, snow and rocks yet I also ran Mickey Thompson Baja Boss AT 37s on 38psi daily and remote reservoir Fox shocks… kind of curious since I just purchased (still waiting for that much needed day off), Nitto Ridge Grapplers 285/79R17 with Motegi Trailites, thinking maybe it’s just the softness and psi that will help make a difference in the ride.
Anyways any and all help with this predicament would be appreciated. And yes, the JL got “downgraded” back to a basic Rubicon and I was smart enough to keep all my audio, lights (rock, light bars and light pods plus Bantam controller), winch and all my MOLLE and loadout so I didn’t have to start new on the 4G, even swapped back in the upgraded turbo (Garrett G25-550) to drop in the Tacoma when the temps aren’t so extreme.
So this is the problem: I am a bit “sensitive” when it comes to motion sickness (organ transplant recipient and 3x cancer survivor… only 43yo). While I completely understand SUVs and trucks ride differently, I partly blame the PCS (pre-collision) but more so when I deactivate it, it doesn’t seem to change the outcome. Would anyone have an idea if simply going to taller and softer springs a/o shocks help this or is there another trick to making the ride feel more “overland” rather than stiff like a rock crawler. It’s ironic since my Wrangler was built for trails, mud, snow and rocks yet I also ran Mickey Thompson Baja Boss AT 37s on 38psi daily and remote reservoir Fox shocks… kind of curious since I just purchased (still waiting for that much needed day off), Nitto Ridge Grapplers 285/79R17 with Motegi Trailites, thinking maybe it’s just the softness and psi that will help make a difference in the ride.
Anyways any and all help with this predicament would be appreciated. And yes, the JL got “downgraded” back to a basic Rubicon and I was smart enough to keep all my audio, lights (rock, light bars and light pods plus Bantam controller), winch and all my MOLLE and loadout so I didn’t have to start new on the 4G, even swapped back in the upgraded turbo (Garrett G25-550) to drop in the Tacoma when the temps aren’t so extreme.
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