Lift Kits and Being White Trash
Friday I took off from work as a Personal Day. I have never taken an actual personal day for personal reasons from work in the 6-years Iβve worked for my company, despite them offering the time. I have taken personal time in the past, but usually itβs just another day for a long-weekend road trip to somewheres exotic β and not a bona-fide personal reason.
I had a list of things of things I wanted to get done that day, like a hair cut, getting my camera repaired, and grocery shopping. But it mostly ended up being a day when I slept in and didnβt do much besides go and talk to a couple of shops about getting my truck jacked up.
Β What Iβm Leaning Towards
After thinking about it for a quite a bit, I am leaning towards going with 35s, a BDS-six inch lift, and 4.88 gearing. The shop said it would probably come out to between $5-6k, but I am not sure if that includes the re-gearing. A lot of money, but so be it β Iβve been saving my money, and my truck is my toy.
My top priorities for the lift kit is getting a truck that looks quite nice, has better ground-clearance especially in the snow, doesnβt break-down way out in the woods, doesnβt drink dramatically more fuel, and is economical to maintain. Those might be a tough combination with a lift-kit, but if I stay at 6-inches with the lift kit, get a good brand kit with necessary accessories, re-gear to avoid straining the transmission, and only put 35s on it, I should be okay. Iβd rather spend the money now, rather get broke down somewheres in the boondocks and spending a lot of money for front-end repairs.
In my ideal world, I would love to do 37s and 6 inch lift plus a 3β body lift. But alas, money is no object, and indeed, I am afraid of the damage I would do the front end and the drive-shafts, putting so much weight and load on them. Iβve researched doing that on the interwebs, but and it might be a fun project if the truck was retired to be a mud-toy around the farm, but not when itβs something Iβm taking on long-trips in the back country. Instead, Iβd rather spend money a quality lift-kit that doesnβt put CV boots at a bad angle by replacing proper components, which I would have take somewhere to get fixed.
4.88 gearing with the 35s is a bit lower then a stock gears, but it will give me more power on the hills, and make crawling easier. Iβve always though the factory gearing was a bit high. From what Iβve read, it also wonβt hurt gas mileage much compared to a higher gearing, e.g. 4.56s. It also leaves open the possibility of going to 37s when the 35s wear out and need to be replaced eventually, without regearing, if I am willing to sacrifice some power (e.g. 4.88s on 37s are about the factory gear ratio).
At any rate, the local shop seemed to think I could do that. I think it would make my truck look a lot more muscular, and give me a lot more ground-clearance in the snow and getting in and out of campsites, and on rough roads. It will be fun in April, once my truck jacked up, and Iβm on my first road trip again with the higher vantage points and better views. If I want to go higher, I will think about the body lift later on.
Now the White Trash Part
So after I was looking at jacking up my truck, I had to swing by the Salvation Army to look for a new sports-coat. I was disappointed that I couldnβt find one, because the one I currently wear that after 7 years is wearing out. I only wear a sportscoat to work about 100 days a year, and a such, they tend to last. I really didnβt want to spend a fortunate, but I wanted to look good. I guess I will be stuck going to JC Penny or another large chain store to get a new sportscoat.
It really felt kind of guilty shopping at the thrift shop, looking for clothes for work, after looking at those expensive lift kits. But heck, itβs helping charity, and whatever β if it looks nice β who cares if I spent $30 or $70 on the jacket. But it sure seemed trashy going there, after drooling over off-road equipment at the off-road stores.
Then I had stop by the Freihofer’sΒ Outlet store in Schenetady to stock up on bake goods and cookies. They tasted pretty awesome too. But it just seemed so trashy and tacky to be going to a discount bake goods place, after spending so much time looking at lift kits.
Note: Sample pictures used in this article are from OK 4WD’s Online Garage, which shows the quality work they do in Northwestern New Jersey. I didn’t ask permission to use the photos, and if they really object, please email me. They look like they do nice work, and I lived near them, would definately talk to their shop.
2 Comments
What kind of rims and tires did you put on your truck in this picture
I have the exact same truck as in this picture and want to put those tires and rims on my truck
6 inch BDS lift with leaf springs… 35 Nitto Trail Grappler AT (not the muds, for less noise/longer life), 18 inch Rockstar wheels.