That is why you go to OFFROADEO !Did some exploring in the hills above my neighborhood. Still learning about the truck and what it can do.
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That is why you go to OFFROADEO !
I just did TX on Friday, I would think a half day would still be better than nothing, these things are so capable.That would be fun for sure! I bought mine used so I don't get that full day option. I might do the half day though.
There were things I did at the off-rodeo that will never do with my own Bronco. And for the hard-core Bronco guys, they probably rate the toughest thing you do at the off-rodeo as a 4 out of 10 (and probably even less)I just did TX on Friday, I would think a half day would still be better than nothing, these things are so capable.
Sounds like my point exactly , I may not use all of it BUT I know now it will do things I wouldn`t think of doing . If we are out somewhere and someone suggests something like the tx 2 step I now know both how to go about it and that it can be done, with confidence.There were things I did at the off-rodeo that will never do with my own Bronco. And for the hard-core Bronco guys, they probably rate the toughest thing you do at the off-rodeo as a 4 out of 10 (and probably even less)
I probably take my Bronco to a 2 or 3 out of what it is capable of offroad and that is OK with me. It is nice to know I could do something stupid if I had to and the Bronco could handle it (like escaping from a bunch of Mad Max zombies or something like that), but ordinarily I am just traversing rutted out county back-roads or climbing 15* incline snow-covered hills to get to a good hunting spot.
Totally recommend going if you can, especially if you are not an experienced off-roader. If you are like me, you don't know what you don't know, and the off-rodeo is a great eye-opener for what a Bronco can do, in a relatively safe environment.
I am no off-road expert or hard core off-roader, but seriously I didn't learn anything at Off-Roadeo... The instructor even apologized for not having anything more advanced for us to do.Sounds like my point exactly , I may not use all of it BUT I know now it will do things I wouldn`t think of doing . If we are out somewhere and someone suggests something like the tx 2 step I now know both how to go about it and that it can be done, with confidence.
Nobody asked for a referee here, but I gotta sayβ¦if you are unwilling to see a usefulness for these to protect the rocker panels beyond the grocery store, youβre just trolling, dense, or both.Was a simple question on what you hoped to get out of them?
To me it seems like a 60 pound penalty towards your GVWR for ~$300 that increases the chances of body damage on any moderate to difficult trail. For instance, I don't think you could use a hi-lift to jack on these safely by any means.
But if you like how it looks, you do you by all means! Will definitely help prevent door dings at the grocery store if nothing else!
Look, maybe you didn't read all of my responses. I'm coming from ~7 years of 4Runner ownership where body mounted rails, especially out west are a major liability to cause body damage. If I didn't have a proper frame mounted slider on my vehicle there are many times where I would have taken body damage for sure the last 10 years.Nobody asked for a referee here, but I gotta sayβ¦if you are unwilling to see a usefulness for these to protect the rocker panels beyond the grocery store, youβre just trolling, dense, or both.
Not everybody is rock crawling with their bronco. Here in the Great Lakes, we donβt deal with a lot of rocks/breakover tests on the trails. But there are plenty of fallen branches and limbs that can get kicked up against the rockers and doors. You donβt need a frame mounted rail to protect against that.
βBut if you like how it looks, you do you by all means!β
The same could be said for those fender flares on your Braptor.
34 x 10.5???New tires (34" Toyos) and a bath!
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