Jim's TJ - EXACTLY. Clayton, Rubi 241, 5 speed, steering, drive shafts... Perfect frame. That Clayton installation is text book perfect on a rust free frame.Joliet Jake Blues wrote:I thinki it was chit u-joints my mechanic tapped in for me before RC. never had a issue with them unitl the last RC trip then I spit one out and another a few weeks later at FF.mrfreakinwhite wrote:If you're going through u-joints that quickly on 44 shafts, you probably have worn out ears.
Real spicer joints are pretty good.
Jim's frame and suspension are mint. Clayton long arms and a perfect frame. The whole kit was done by Siwinski, and Jim's steering and everything is done. I've convoyed with him at 75-80 mph several times, and road manners aren't something he ever worries about. It's got a Rubi case and 5 speed, full armor, etc. Its worst quirk is it is too tall for its 35s.
The jeep you speak of is being parted out.
U-Joints - yeah, so a cheap joint goes on the trail and causes minor collateral damage to the ears. The ears will only take so many failures before they are worn out and splayed. This one is off a 2011 JK. One failure of the stock joint from shock load. The stub shaft is damaged. We put a joint in it as a temporary fix until his RCVs arrived. Stock shafts will only last so long. Especially with a stick shift. I think I might have been talking about this with people on the trail Saturday, but wheeling with a foot on the clutch pedal leads to this. A little roll back, a little forward torque... It's much better to stall than to ride the clutch, and with fuel injection just a little throttle tickle at the right moment keeps you crawling and avoiding this.