columnshift
Member
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2014
- Posts
- 34
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Minnesota
- First Name
- Mark
- Truck Year
- 1977
- Truck Model
- 1500 heavy half (retired)
- Engine Size
- 350
Because the main offroading i've ever done so far was going places I needed to for work (so you guys go out and get stuck?? for FUN???
) and trying not to get stuck, I don't have much knowledge that's probably common to everyone else in this board. 
My biggest interest at the moment is in adding more competent offroad ability to a vehicle that will mostly driven on the street. Ie what will start as a 90/10 vehicle only going off road when I have to, might become 80/20 in the future once I get more rural, and 70/30 if I start finding hard to get places that i'd like to camp. An upgrade that helps me tow better like a stronger axle or a granny gear transmission happens to also improve the off-road ability so there's no downside. But some upgrades reduce the competence elsewhere so i'm trying to get a better feel for it all.
Because i'm still planning that "one Suburban I want to keep for DECADES" and only want to frame-off restore it and upgrade certain parts once, i'm trying to plan ahead a bit more than would be usual. What I mean by "understanding different types of offroading" is that I mean a Trophy Truck built for 120mph baja is built quite differently than a Pro-2 truck built to be light for a short course which is built quite differently than something tough optimized for rock crawling up impossible conditions. You can't make one do EVERYTHING. But i'd like to build something more competent off-road than anything stock in every way possible so i'm curious what goals there even are to set...
Besides high speed baja runs, short speed lightweight jump-heavy pro-2 stuff (which I probably have the least interest in or I wouldn't pick a suburban), and rockcrawlers, are there any other contradictory 'goals' people build for which make them choose one type of modifications over another? For instance I see solid axles on rock crawlers but independant everything on the other two.
I'm trying to understand where/when adding more offroad ability starts compromising my ability to tow or travel long distances for instance, beyond the level of swapping big tires back for road tires.
Sorry for all the words.
Isn't sure how else to be clear without misunderstanding.
My biggest interest at the moment is in adding more competent offroad ability to a vehicle that will mostly driven on the street. Ie what will start as a 90/10 vehicle only going off road when I have to, might become 80/20 in the future once I get more rural, and 70/30 if I start finding hard to get places that i'd like to camp. An upgrade that helps me tow better like a stronger axle or a granny gear transmission happens to also improve the off-road ability so there's no downside. But some upgrades reduce the competence elsewhere so i'm trying to get a better feel for it all.
Because i'm still planning that "one Suburban I want to keep for DECADES" and only want to frame-off restore it and upgrade certain parts once, i'm trying to plan ahead a bit more than would be usual. What I mean by "understanding different types of offroading" is that I mean a Trophy Truck built for 120mph baja is built quite differently than a Pro-2 truck built to be light for a short course which is built quite differently than something tough optimized for rock crawling up impossible conditions. You can't make one do EVERYTHING. But i'd like to build something more competent off-road than anything stock in every way possible so i'm curious what goals there even are to set...
Besides high speed baja runs, short speed lightweight jump-heavy pro-2 stuff (which I probably have the least interest in or I wouldn't pick a suburban), and rockcrawlers, are there any other contradictory 'goals' people build for which make them choose one type of modifications over another? For instance I see solid axles on rock crawlers but independant everything on the other two.
I'm trying to understand where/when adding more offroad ability starts compromising my ability to tow or travel long distances for instance, beyond the level of swapping big tires back for road tires.
Sorry for all the words.