Nop..
It just a result of being out there for 30+ years of agriculture and off road in many vehicles and machinery.
You should try it, it expand your mind and confidence when things go wrong.
Grew up on a farm, 25 years military around the globe, engineer in Aerospace, predominately in EMS, LE, and Fire back country helicopters industry; pretty sure I have "innovation, expansive mind, and confidence in my ability. What was that part about open mind you keep coming back to about how the Defender is junk no matter what compared to all of the last 20 or so pages of BS you published; is that open minded?
Loosen up, the parts Rover-in-tow comment was a joke.
Just like the universal Land Rover magnetic rear bumper that I'm designing for you guys -- it will catch and retain parts that fall off so that they're not left behind.
Is that an aluminum magnet bumper; we are LR and use premium alloys only so not sure it will work or be needed; haven't seen a JLR recall on driveline in decades. The steel one should work great for Jeeps to pick up the various driveline components though.
So using the wheels and tires for scale, 16.5" rocker clearance?
My truck has 28" clearance there, and 18" under the trans crossmember, which is the lowest point between the wheelbase. And it's barely enough for overlanding here.
Is that from the vehicles on your signature; F250 and Ram 2500 I think it said? Your wheelbase is far greater so rocker clearance has a much greater impact in more ways than one compared to any short wheelbase vehicle; ramp or break-over is measured with 4 points on level ground. Not sure if those are the reference for the "truck" you mentioned or not but that is an initial response without knowing the reference. Careful what you say though about trucks and overlanding,
@EricTyrrell says the F150 is the most practical vehicle which I would agree with for full size truck use on the construction, home-use, and commercial threads; not sure how he ended up here in the overland section. I personally think you should drive whatever you want and respect the same of others but hey, that's just me and a few couple million other people's point of view.
Wasn't able to find anything on F250/Ram2500 as I am sure they change a ton with the different cab sizes; have the Silverado trail version published though and some decent numbers for trucks these days depending on version. Did find some pretty good comparisons on JLR, Jeep, and G-Wagon, and Prado for reference. Interestingly enough the modern FJ Cruiser had some of the best specs all around for off-roading..............DISCONTINUED.