Yes- Baja will break everything, it is a LEGIT test for the ability and durability of your vehicle. This is why the Baja 1000 is such a respected race, it eats vehicles alive. This is just something that you have to know before you start spending any serious time down there. Especially if you actually use these vehicles for the purpose you built them. Fourth trip down, I noticed a sound I hadn't heard before - I was 600 miles south of the border and a hundred miles from the highway that goes north to south. After looking underneath, I found that one of the tempered aluminum cross members (there are two one in the front and one in the back) had snapped the ears off where it connected to the frame rails. Holy guacamole! I purposefully didn't tell my little brother what had happened because if he knew how bad it was he would have ******** his pants. Luckily, I've got a good Baja network going and my buddy brought me to an insanely cool Baja metal fab shop owned by a gentleman called Don Beni (Don is a title of respect in Spanish). The shop is located in the you-will-never-find-it-gringo outskirts of La Paz. Don Beni lifted my bed and camper above the frame rails and rebuilt the cross members in steel. He actually re-engineered them so they are now fully boxed - so in addition to being made of steel they are now designed correctly. His boys were able to get all of this done on a Sunday and half of Monday - a rush order, setting aside all the other projects they had going on to get me set up... I fricking love Mexico! Since then I've had my truck down there three more times... lots of bad roads, dirt, washboard and mild rocky climbs in and out of spots - she's been solid.... but I know if I keep going south that it's not a matter of if but when something else will get busted.Hi, my name is Kevin and I like to stir the pot...
John, didn’t you have a massive break/failure on that aluminum bed down in Baja when you first got it?
So all of this led me to a conclusion: You can try all you want to super-over design your rig, it will still break (assuming your not just driving it down dirt roads). So, to me, it's kind of more important that you know what to do to get yourself out of a bind and how you react to it when it does eventually happen. These things we're driving are big, heavy vehicles, with all kinds of additional complicated systems - if you want bullet proof buy a Tacoma and a fiberglass shell.