Four Wheeler – October 2019

(Frankie) #1
62 OCTOBER 2019 FOUR WHEELER fourwheeler.com

suspension and into new wheels, tires, front
axle, and coilovers, along with the reimagina-
tion of the lighting from boring to brilliant. In
this installation, we made the final preparations
on the JK so it would be well outfitted for Four
Wheeler’s inaugural Overland Adventure (and
all its future endeavors).
In order to maintain manageable fuel econo-
my for the bouts of highway between trail runs,
we stuck with 33-inch rugged-terrain tires—
Dick Cepek’s new Trail Country EXP. Since
the 33s didn’t add much ground clearance and
the Jeep still had abusive, rocky off-roading on
the docket, we decided to trail-proof the under-
belly with MetalCloak’s Undercloak Integrated
Armor System. The stock plastic bumper on
the Jeep’s backside had been thoroughly altered

B


UILDING OFF-ROAD VEHICLES IS OFTEN ABOUT
sacrifice. We trade paychecks and fuel
economy for bigger tires, weight at the
scales for winches and armor, and we
might even give up highway privileges just to run
that sought-after engine swap. When crafting
our plans to turn a beaten ’17 Wrangler into an
adventure-worthy steed, we had choices to make.
The overarching goal for this Jeep was
simple—give it enough gear and suspension for
overland travel, provide enough armor and trac-
tion to keep it safe while bouncing off the hard
obstacles, and have it operate within the con-
fines of a close-to-factory tire size to ensure that
acceptable highway mileage would not be com-
promised. In previous issues, we documented
the Jeep’s transition out of its battered stock

by rocks, and the factory rear recovery point
actually lessened the departure angle. GenRight
Off Road’s aluminum rear bumper weighs
roughly 60 pounds less than similar steel bum-
pers, improves the departure angle, and offers
two frame-mounted recovery points.
One area we refused to compromise on was
fuel, for the Jeep and its passengers. To keep the
gas tanks topped off throughout extended off-
road travel, we mounted a 4.5-gallon RotopaX
FuelpaX beside the spare tire. As for fueling
hungry adventurers, the days of balancing
stoves and cookware on logs and rocks are now
in the past. The Drop Down Tailgate Table
from Front Runner Outfitters was built to fit
the JK’s tailgate and offers a meal-prep surface
within easy reach of the cargo area.

Skidplates, tailgate cooking, and more for an adventure-


bound Wrangler


By Jered Korfhage [email protected] Photos: Jered Korfhage


Tech


PROTECT & SERVE
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