Hey guys. Long time lurker. Finally decided to make an account and become active here. I bought my Burb back in January after selling my 07 Tahoe which I bought after my 04 Tahoe 8 months prior. Thought I was "upgrading". Anyway 03-06 are my favorite years but Ill spare you all my weird reason.
Mods so far are zero. 1 month after I bought it the transmission went out. That put a damper on things. Anyway kind of a blessing in disguise because now I know its fresh and can travel with confidence. Oh the A/C Evap Core went out too. I replaced it myself for 75 bucks and a days labor. Beats $1000 bucks.
What I plan to use my suburban for is what is driving my mods. First for foremost this is a family hauler and daily driver for the next year or so.
First order of business now is the god awful worn out suspension and soft tires. This thing drives and rides like its on marsh mellows. I found a gentleman on tahoeyukon forum thats makes a sweet coil over setup for the front. Im going to go for that and ditch these torsion bars. In the process I plan to lift the rear 1 inch and and match the front to it.
The primary use of my burb will be hauling two dirt bikes to races and camping there and going family camping while carrying kayaks etc.
First mod will be a roof rack -
Im looking at ARB and SmittyBuilt. Cost plays a role but quality is importanter to me. Who has what? Pros and Cons.
Which leads to the RTT. I will be using one. Not sure if Ill pony up the cash and get a hardshell or much cheaper folding one. Input please
Folding Pros - cost-more space per dollar, more size options, less roof space taken up during transit, annex available or can be used to as part of an awning
Folding Cons - Taller profile and not as sleek as hardshell, longer setup and take down, possibly not as strong in windy conditions
Hardshell pros - sleek and low profile, easy setup and take down
Harsdhell cons - Cost, space available inside, space used on roof rack is a constant, no annex or overhang of any kind.
As of right now Im going to go with a folding one. One though here is I can put some some super long cross bars and mount some kayak J carriers to those and have the tent in the middle of those for transit. I could also put more gear on the Roof rack in front of the tent. Mostly totes with sleeping bags, life jackets etc. keep the roof as light as possible.
This will free up the area behind the third row(four and sometimes 6 kids go camping with us. plus we are new to camping and figuring it out as we go. Please share thoughts and lessons learned.) for Coolers, camp stove, tables, extra ground tents and food. A fridge/freezer is a great idea but I can't justify that amount of cash for the short trips we do now. I also have a hitch hauler I use with a nice size metal box for chairs etc. I guess the roof rack will free up this space too. Thats sort of the plan for now for functionality. There are other little things I want to do like new carpet, rear seat heaters etc but that stuff isn't priority.
Poser Pic. I was parked there for work lol
Edit : Forgot to mention I want to add dual battery setup as well to power LED lights that I will mount on all sides of the roof rack. Should help when setting up in the dark
Mods so far are zero. 1 month after I bought it the transmission went out. That put a damper on things. Anyway kind of a blessing in disguise because now I know its fresh and can travel with confidence. Oh the A/C Evap Core went out too. I replaced it myself for 75 bucks and a days labor. Beats $1000 bucks.
What I plan to use my suburban for is what is driving my mods. First for foremost this is a family hauler and daily driver for the next year or so.
First order of business now is the god awful worn out suspension and soft tires. This thing drives and rides like its on marsh mellows. I found a gentleman on tahoeyukon forum thats makes a sweet coil over setup for the front. Im going to go for that and ditch these torsion bars. In the process I plan to lift the rear 1 inch and and match the front to it.
The primary use of my burb will be hauling two dirt bikes to races and camping there and going family camping while carrying kayaks etc.
First mod will be a roof rack -
Im looking at ARB and SmittyBuilt. Cost plays a role but quality is importanter to me. Who has what? Pros and Cons.
Which leads to the RTT. I will be using one. Not sure if Ill pony up the cash and get a hardshell or much cheaper folding one. Input please
Folding Pros - cost-more space per dollar, more size options, less roof space taken up during transit, annex available or can be used to as part of an awning
Folding Cons - Taller profile and not as sleek as hardshell, longer setup and take down, possibly not as strong in windy conditions
Hardshell pros - sleek and low profile, easy setup and take down
Harsdhell cons - Cost, space available inside, space used on roof rack is a constant, no annex or overhang of any kind.
As of right now Im going to go with a folding one. One though here is I can put some some super long cross bars and mount some kayak J carriers to those and have the tent in the middle of those for transit. I could also put more gear on the Roof rack in front of the tent. Mostly totes with sleeping bags, life jackets etc. keep the roof as light as possible.
This will free up the area behind the third row(four and sometimes 6 kids go camping with us. plus we are new to camping and figuring it out as we go. Please share thoughts and lessons learned.) for Coolers, camp stove, tables, extra ground tents and food. A fridge/freezer is a great idea but I can't justify that amount of cash for the short trips we do now. I also have a hitch hauler I use with a nice size metal box for chairs etc. I guess the roof rack will free up this space too. Thats sort of the plan for now for functionality. There are other little things I want to do like new carpet, rear seat heaters etc but that stuff isn't priority.
Poser Pic. I was parked there for work lol
Edit : Forgot to mention I want to add dual battery setup as well to power LED lights that I will mount on all sides of the roof rack. Should help when setting up in the dark
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