Victory_Overland
Explorer
@Victory_Overland[/USER] I have pulled what I can out of my interior too. I pulled my 3ed row and switched it with my Wife's 5 seater rear deck. Although I did not pull the Rear AC as My dog Rides back there on long Family Trips. I was surprised how much they weighed, I would pull two of my second row two, but we keep my son setting in the middle
No chance I am taking out the rear AC but yeah, that 3rd row seat is ridiculous weight; I think if I remember its 90lbs total with brackets and panels. However, I think if you have the ARB, most of your parts are still under there except the bumper support, bumper cover, and I think you need to get new wheel arches. I bet Ebay or RockAuto is your go to on most of these parts and not really too expensive from my original search; once you get that stuff the ARB/TR bumper will sell quick.
I did not buy this for excellent gas milage, never entered into the equation as my last vehicle was a 710M Pizgauer that got 16 mpg downhill with a tail wind. Before that a 404 Mog that got maybe 10 mpg if I was lucky.
So with the additional comfort and the ability to travel at mostly posted speed and great off road ability I am really ahead. Well, that is how I feel. It is also a DD and of course uses the most expensive gas one can buy.
Maintenance is a bit costly, parts are not inexpensive, but it is my baby and I have to live with the decisions I have made. I can do that.
Yep, no doubt on how porky Victory is but I take stuff out I don't need and put in what I do need. The tool kit will always stay in and I am considering not making a rear sliding drawer under my sleeping platform but a sliding tray that will hold lightweight cases. My thought process is that if I have drawers, they will stay full; and if I have cases, then I can easily remove the weight as needed and only leave the specific cases per my desires; i.e. tool kit box, camp stove box, 9 irons, stuffed buffalo, you know; all the necessities.
Even when I build or install the aux fuel tank to ditch the Jerries, I'll sacrifice some additional mileage for increased range by carrying more fuel weight but the goal is to pack out as light as possible but still be comfy. If I can get over 350+ miles on a trail I guess I'd be happy which means I need another 10+ gallons of fuel on board and about 11.5+ mpg average.