- First Name
- Dave
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2020
- Threads
- 42
- Messages
- 4,087
- Reaction score
- 16,592
- Location
- Hanging Rock, North Carolina
- Vehicle(s)
- 19 Z71, 06 VTX1300, 94 Cobra, 21 BL Bronco 4dr.
- Your Bronco Model
- Badlands
The tires play a big part.
as does the lack of lift.
All those small increments of height stack up eventually and DO gain you more belly height, articulation, etc.
The Bronco is no Jeep and never will be with the IFS.
But they are highly capable even in stock form.
A very well balanced machine to have IFS and all the downsides it brings when it comes to serious offroading.
The lockers are a game changer in the times they’re needed.
Things can be done to make it better, but all of those come with a monetary cost and some of them come at a daily driver/Ford-engineered smooth balance cost.
They’ve got some low-hanging fruit that makes contact.
All we can do is take one thing, alleviate what we can, move to the next thing.
Mine is constantly going through revisions.
Shock skids help a lot, but you’re still gonna bang them.
Crossmember UHMW cladding is probably the most bang for the buck modification for allowing them to not get caught as much.
A lift and larger tires move all of that belly stuff a bit higher.
It’s just the nature of the beast.
While I could technically crawl harder stuff in my TJ, the Bronco does pretty darned good at anything I’ve thrown at it. And I have not necessarily been easy on it. I’ve never had to pull cable for my own recovery.
The lines you have to pick are a bit different sometimes.
as does the lack of lift.
All those small increments of height stack up eventually and DO gain you more belly height, articulation, etc.
The Bronco is no Jeep and never will be with the IFS.
But they are highly capable even in stock form.
A very well balanced machine to have IFS and all the downsides it brings when it comes to serious offroading.
The lockers are a game changer in the times they’re needed.
Things can be done to make it better, but all of those come with a monetary cost and some of them come at a daily driver/Ford-engineered smooth balance cost.
They’ve got some low-hanging fruit that makes contact.
All we can do is take one thing, alleviate what we can, move to the next thing.
Mine is constantly going through revisions.
Shock skids help a lot, but you’re still gonna bang them.
Crossmember UHMW cladding is probably the most bang for the buck modification for allowing them to not get caught as much.
A lift and larger tires move all of that belly stuff a bit higher.
It’s just the nature of the beast.
While I could technically crawl harder stuff in my TJ, the Bronco does pretty darned good at anything I’ve thrown at it. And I have not necessarily been easy on it. I’ve never had to pull cable for my own recovery.
The lines you have to pick are a bit different sometimes.
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