I love your rig man! This gen and the monty style have been a fav for a while! Reminds me of the old African safari trips!
Great thread, in fact i want change my Samurai LWB for a Trooper, but have a question, why isn't the trooper a popular expedition vehicle? as is a Patrol, Landcruiser or a Defender??
Here are a few from a run we did last weekend.
1st Gen with lockers and lift
![]()
![]()
![]()
Stock 2nd gen on street tires
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Great thread, in fact i want change my Samurai LWB for a Trooper, but have a question, why isn't the trooper a popular expedition vehicle? as is a Patrol, Landcruiser or a Defender??
Great pictures of the Troopers on this topic! I did not realize that Troopers can be good expeditionary rigs until I saw the photos here. I think the common misconception here in my country is that 4x4s with IFS are not suited for offroading due to the limited articulation of the front suspension.
Solid axles are an advantage only for hard core rock crawling IMO. I have wheeled the above 93 RS Trooper pretty hard, including trails such as Golden Spike in Moab, with basically stock drivetrain except for gears and lockers. The only breakage I have had is a CV axle a few times, usually doing stupid stuff...but it is only a $40 or less junkyard part. Not bad for 35" tires.
It is worth noting that the Isuzu IFS is more durable than most: I have been told by very experienced wheelers that it is much stronger than a Toyota IFS system.
I dont know about that one. The trail doesnt have to be "hard core" to find an advantage in a solid axle. The ability to traverse trails with camber changes without the truck bucking and jerking from corner to corner is one. The body will remain pretty level while the axle drops and comes out of holes or up and over things. On an IFS rig, drops and dips result in a nose dive.
Yeah that thing is sweet. Wish I could afford it.
You definitely need to try some sway bar disconnects... cuts way down on the body rocking back and forth. Sway bars are nice on road but are distinctly counterproductive off road.
There's a reason high speed off-road racing trucks are IFS.
The truth of the matter is there is no truth of the matter. Different strokes for different folks. In my world expo wheeling is about getting there not about climbing the biggest rock on the trail. Most expo driving world wide is on some kind of a path or road. IFS works fine and rides nice. There is a huge difference in IFS systems. The Zoo system is well designed reliable and easy to repair if needed. I do some serious wheeling in my Trooper and trust my front end completely. I do carry some spares and I can take apart and reassemble an entire ZOO front end in a couple of hours on the side of the road sitting in the dirt. But YOU should be able to do that with any front end if you wheel.
I don't jump my truck and I wheel to enjoy and survive the trip not to play king of the hill. That's for dedicated trail rigs not expo rigs.
As far as your ultimate solution I disagree. SAS has it's uses. But most IFS trucks don't SAS easily. On Zoos it puts the ride height way too high for a daily driver expo rig. You lose the ride, the COG. Custom anything is rarely as reliable as stock and parts availability "out there" can be a problem when you stray to far from stock.
Bottom line is most of the world is a gravel road. Most of the people in the world 4 wheel in old Toyota Camry's, and VWs. What we call wheeling the third world calls going to the store. Even our mildly built rigs are overkill in 95% of the situations we will ever be in.
No one solution works for everything every time. I own both an IFS truck and a solid axle truck. They both work for what I use them for and both are reliable.
And since this is a Trooper trail shot thread here are a couple more.
Zoo folks are used to being told that we can't do something in our trucks and then having to come back and pull out the person who said it after we already did!