jjohnson1892
Adventurer
I recommend buying it with a hardtop and then buying a soft top afterwards. JK/JKUs that come with the hard top from the factory are prewired for the wiper and fluid, so it's one less thing you have to do if you end up wanting to use a hard top. Downside is storing it - a hoist is a good way to go if you have the garage and space.
I have a Mopar premium soft top from a 2011, and a Bestop Trektop NX for my Jeep (bought the Trektop first, wanted to try traditional and got killer deal on NIB top), both are great and have had zero leaking or condensation issues. The sound difference is big between the two (Mopar is better) - could be a combination of the shape and the material. Splurge a bit when getting a soft top and buying a higher end fabric (sail cloth or whatever they have now).
Not going to dive into their argument, but I bought a Rubi because I was unsure when I could upgrade to lockers and higher gearing (among other things). I only found cheaper/reasonable models with 3.21s when I was looking, so the Rubi's standard 3.73s in auto transmissions was good enough for me. Runs 35s fine, though I would like to get to a 4.56 or so down the road. Having the upgraded transfer case is great for the wheeling I do, having lockers allowed me to look elsewhere for mod money when it came along, and the stock tires and armor helped me through the early stages of my Jeep ownership and wheeling. Overall, wouldn't do anything different besides looking a bit more for 4.10s and I can say I'd do a Rubi again down the road.
I have a Mopar premium soft top from a 2011, and a Bestop Trektop NX for my Jeep (bought the Trektop first, wanted to try traditional and got killer deal on NIB top), both are great and have had zero leaking or condensation issues. The sound difference is big between the two (Mopar is better) - could be a combination of the shape and the material. Splurge a bit when getting a soft top and buying a higher end fabric (sail cloth or whatever they have now).
Not going to dive into their argument, but I bought a Rubi because I was unsure when I could upgrade to lockers and higher gearing (among other things). I only found cheaper/reasonable models with 3.21s when I was looking, so the Rubi's standard 3.73s in auto transmissions was good enough for me. Runs 35s fine, though I would like to get to a 4.56 or so down the road. Having the upgraded transfer case is great for the wheeling I do, having lockers allowed me to look elsewhere for mod money when it came along, and the stock tires and armor helped me through the early stages of my Jeep ownership and wheeling. Overall, wouldn't do anything different besides looking a bit more for 4.10s and I can say I'd do a Rubi again down the road.