AmericaOverland
Explorer
Table of Contents
Day 2 Chrysler is paying for a new cam and crank.
I see later down the thread that you had to get your OPDA and Cam replaced. Seems to be a common problem for 2005-2006 Wranglers with the 4.0L engine of a certain range of build dates. Fortunately, I'm outside that build date range AND I had the OPDA checked this week (as I bought my gorgeous LJ last week!). Other than the silver top, it's just like mine, though I don't have it beyond stock at this time. I'm wondering about getting the hard top done like that to ease up on the heat and make it easy to clean. I LOVE the way it drives, a better ride over bumps, cracks, and dips in the road. Yours looks beautiful in the snow photos... I have both the soft and hard top. I chose to use the hard top and store the soft top until I figure out what to do with it.
Now that you've had the LJ for a while, could you tell me why is it that when I drive a car like the Honda CR-V, which I traded in for the Jeep, I have to almost come to a complete stop and brace myself when I come to a hard bump or that dreaded "V" dip that is built at the street boundary between street and driveway, and yet the LJ walks over it like it's nothing? In the LJ, I feel the roughness mainly in the steering wheel, but not in the way it rides or the body. In the CR-V, when I hit a band dip running across the street, I would get pulled down and the jerked up hard in the seat; it would follow every little thing in the road. It might as well be without shocks or springs. Is it the combination of wheelbase, coilovers, and shocks on the LJ? I'm reminded of the old pickups with the heavy axles and bodies. The LJ is simply a joy to drive. I like how the inertia of the heavy axles prevents me from feeling every little thing, not even following the vertical profile of the street.
Great Jeep and great trips!