Hard to believe, but I've already got about 6,000 miles on the JK Safari Cab. A trip to Florida, a trip to North Carolina for Overland Expo, and now I'm in Indiana, it adds up quickly.
Over the first few months there have only been a few very minor things that needed attention -
- the headliner panels are held in place with Velcro; I didn't use long enough strips of Velcro initially so they were sagging a bit. That's been fixed.
- a few of the roof rack bolts seeped slightly in the rain at first. This was not unexpected because I initially didn't seal them because I wanted to wait until I installed the roll-bar brackets for the rack in case I decided I needed different length bolts for the brackets. When I installed the brackets I sealed the bolts and they've been fine since then.
- I need to adjust the spring tension of the rear wiper arm - it needs to press a little more tightly on the glass to do a perfectly clean sweep.
Considering this is the first Safari Cab out of the molds and especially since it was made in my home garage, I'm very pleased with how it's working. Other than those small items above, the 6,000 miles have been trouble free, and my overall experience with the top has been great -
- it's completely weathertight (once the final sealing was done on the roof rack bolts). It's been through Florida downpours and 6 hours in the rain on the way to Overland Expo and the weather always stays outside - nothing leaks.
- because of the insulated headliner, it's quieter than the factory hardtop.
- the barn door makes cargo loading and access so much easier than the factory liftgate.
- I didn't expect to like them so much, but the power vent windows in the back really improve the air flow through the Jeep.
This photo was taken yesterday on the road at a "snack stop" - had to visit one my my favorite places for some frozen custard...