Maybe it's just me being an asshole but I fail to see how your rubicon is at fault for your poor decision making abilities on the trail with your family.
Carry on.
Maybe it's just me being an asshole but I fail to see how your rubicon is at fault for your poor decision making abilities on the trail with your family.
Carry on.
I must be an asshole too cause I don't get it either. That could've happened regardless of what you were driving.
Face it, the Rubicon design is inherently flawed when it allows such vital equipment to become exposed to simple sticks and stones. The transmission cooler line, the oil pan, the ATF fluid pan (among others) are all exposed and ready for being ripped out by the next rock or branch. How is that a good design?
No, let's discuss a little bit. I mean if you guys want to be assholes, that is completely up to you. But help me out here. Here are some more photos:
View attachment 200455View attachment 200456View attachment 200457
These are photos of the fire road that we were on. You will find QuicksilverJK pulling me out and towards the main dirt roadway. Please show me where the danger is and how I should have proceeded. Please explain to me how I was the second JK to go threw the trail and yet QuicksilverJK got threw fine and I was not. It more than likely had something to do with him having a manual transmission, but please help a total newbie so I can avoid "poor decision making abilities on the trail".
Face it, the Rubicon design is inherently flawed when it allows such vital equipment to become exposed to simple sticks and stones. The transmission cooler line, the oil pan, the ATF fluid pan (among others) are all exposed and ready for being ripped out by the next rock or branch. How is that a good design?
No, let's discuss a little bit. I mean if you guys want to be assholes, that is completely up to you. But help me out here. Here are some more photos:
View attachment 200455View attachment 200456View attachment 200457
These are photos of the fire road that we were on. You will find QuicksilverJK pulling me out and towards the main dirt roadway. Please show me where the danger is and how I should have proceeded. Please explain to me how I was the second JK to go threw the trail and yet QuicksilverJK got threw fine and I was not. It more than likely had something to do with him having a manual transmission, but please help a total newbie so I can avoid "poor decision making abilities on the trail".
Face it, the Rubicon design is inherently flawed when it allows such vital equipment to become exposed to simple sticks and stones. The transmission cooler line, the oil pan, the ATF fluid pan (among others) are all exposed and ready for being ripped out by the next rock or branch. How is that a good design?
This is the first I've heard of such an incident. How is it a bad design?
So in your mind a Rubicon should look something like this?View attachment 200459
Point being the design doesn't suck, it's just not bullet proof.
This can and does happen actually sorta often. Seen a few gruesome punctures in person.
Don't drive over downed logs, sticks, rebar, guard rail, shovels etc etc
Thank you and I agree, my lesson learned. Thus the title of the thread. But I am having a hard time people telling me that the trail was clearly a poor decision. I only asking for help here to learn more.
Thank you and I agree, my lesson learned. Thus the title of the thread. But I am having a hard time people telling me that the trail was clearly a poor decision. I only asking for help here to learn more.
The part you're missing is that this accident was not the Jeep's fault, and I wouldn't blame you either. It was a freak according that happened on the trail and nothing more. You blaming the design of the Jeep itself is what has people giving you a hard time. Would skids have kept this from happening? Probably. But saying that the Jeep should have prevented it by having a different design, is like saying that it's the Jeep's fault if you rock crawl without sliders and dent up the pinch seam and body.
Next mod after that was the protek system.
Poor design. JK's shouldn't have lug nuts.
View attachment 200460
Poor design. U-joints should have indestructible caps on them.
View attachment 200461
Poor design. Aftermarket drive shafts should be welded to the transfer case so they cannot spin and break.
View attachment 200462
Poor design. Jeeps should not use gear oil because it can leak out.
View attachment 200463
Poor design. Jeeps should not use steel drag links that can bend. They should use plastic so it can bend back.
View attachment 200465
Difference between my breaks and yours, I was prepared for each one. (That's not even all of them. Some are even repeats)