I don’t consider boots going out a failure. It’s cheap and you can drive home. Now, losing the front diff when you’re a 6 hour hike to the next human, that’s a failure.I've got a diff drop with nearly 33's and seem to be chewing up CV boots.
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I don’t consider boots going out a failure. It’s cheap and you can drive home. Now, losing the front diff when you’re a 6 hour hike to the next human, that’s a failure.I've got a diff drop with nearly 33's and seem to be chewing up CV boots.
I see you have F/R lockers, did you break your front diff before the lockers?I don’t consider boots going out a failure. It’s cheap and you can drive home. Now, losing the front diff when you’re a 6 hour hike to the next human, that’s a failure.
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Over here on the east coast the difference between 33 and 35 will keep you from running some trails. Diffing out is like hitting a brick wall. It stops you cold. With a true 35 you clear. Simple as that.I know it's a question may have been asked/answered millions of times. However, I'm trying to find a good reason or motivation for that on LC100/LX470.
So, my understanding is that it's pretty easy to accompany 33" on stock LC100/LX470 with minimum or no modification. However to get 35", significant effort may be needed, and so is the cost. If this is true, why still go for 35"? Other than cosmetic advantage, I knew one benefit is that the ground clearance is increased by 1" comparing to 33". Is there any other benefit I'm not aware of to justify the effort?
Someone didn’t have the right tools onboard to remove flanges and a driveshaft I presume.I don’t consider boots going out a failure. It’s cheap and you can drive home. Now, losing the front diff when you’re a 6 hour hike to the next human, that’s a failure.
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This.Over here on the east coast the difference between 33 and 35 will keep you from running some trails. Diffing out is like hitting a brick wall. It stops you cold. With a true 35 you clear. Simple as that.
BINGO!!!This.
The crew I wheel with definitely stepped it up in difficulty this year and the extra traction gained from a taller tire is huge. Someone in here likened it to mountain bikes using 29" tires these days, this is the perfect example. It gives the tire a much shallower approach in hopping over things. If you get hung up and start spinning wheels on a rock face that little bit of gained ability to gain momentum really moves the needle. Larger tires also equal more sidewall all things being equal. When you get in the tight stuff rolling a bead or pinching a tire is a real risk, and more sidewall helps mitigate some of this risk.
Also, while I think regearing would be beneficial, it is absolutely not essential. I have 3 years and probably 40k on my 35s and it scoots around just fine and gets pretty good mileage to boot. My trip to CO this summer my highway stints I hand calculated about 15mpg. I plan to do the 10% underdrive in my transfer case this winter, for what its worth, which would put me at about a 4.73 effective ratio. 3 years on the 4.30s though have been fine. It seems to be the guys that run 33's and use this as their logic for not running 35's are the ones that promote this theory.
If you don't want to, or feel like you don't need to run 35's then don't, but my experience is that it made a big difference in low traction conditions.
Yes.I see you have F/R lockers, did you break your front diff before the lockers?
The cat didn’t come out because I forgot my brass hammer. The first recovery truck also got stuck in the shale. This trail needed 4wd to get both in and out.Someone didn’t have the right tools onboard to remove flanges and a driveshaft I presume.
As Adam Savage says, every tool is a hammer. Haha glad you got rescued.Yes.
The cat didn’t come out because I forgot my brass hammer. The first recovery truck also got stuck in the shale. This trail needed 4wd to get both in and out.
That's really interesting.Mine drives great on 35s. After regear I’m spinning about 150rpm higher than stock so it holds 5th up decent grades.
Man I run 315/75r16s on mine and I have never had the boiled jellyfish feeling as you describe.there’s got to be more to that than just the simple fact of running 35s on a 16. I think you may have had some lingering suspension issues exacerbated by a larger tire. Are load range E 35s going to ride and handle like the 31” Michelin’s? Absolutely not, but I’m just saying your experience here is unique to you. I don’t daily my 100 anymore, but I do a 3,000 mile (mostly highway in terms of miles maybe 80%) trip and have no issues whatsoever with handling, keeping speeds of 70-80, etc.That's really interesting.
I'm guessing you have good open road manners with 35s and can do a sudden lane change at high speed without being frightened..... which is awesome., but contrary to my extremely limited experience with the taller tyres.
Are yours 16 inch diameter rims or something bigger? I tried 34.6(?) inch tyres on a 16inch rim and it was like driving on a boiled jellyfish. I hated it and was genuinely scared, but can imagine 35" tyres on an 18 inch rim would be a different beast (and the tyres I tested were both well and unevenly worn)
On my turbo diesel, manual gearbox 105 (on 33's) I would like a sixth gear. The engine 'feels' right at about 80-90kmph in 5th gear. It'd be a better open road tourer if the same revs could be had at 110kmph.
There's 5th gear upgrade kits available to achieve something like that rev change, but I'm not in the market for that upgrade at this point. First I need to do some rust removal.
I love that, going to keep that line in the back pocket!As Adam Savage says, every tool is a hammer. Haha glad you got rescued.
Does anyone know which tools are required to do this in the field? I’ve got 360k miles on my front diff and it’s the earlier 2-pinion design. Until I get the funds or time to finally install the lockers and regear kit, I feel like I’m on borrowed time.Someone didn’t have the right tools onboard to remove flanges and a driveshaft I presume.
I believe @ga12r1 may be working on a tool kit specifically for this.Does anyone know which tools are required to do this in the field? I’ve got 360k miles on my front diff and it’s the earlier 2-pinion design. Until I get the funds or time to finally install the lockers and regear kit, I feel like I’m on borrowed time.
OTOH, I’ve really put this truck through it’s paces in the nearly 100k I’ve owned it. I doubt the PO ever took it on dirt roads, never mind anything remotely difficult, but it’s what I’ve learned to wheel in. Suffice to say, there’s been a learning curve. I have not always been gentle. God what an amazing truck she’s been, so forgiving...
That's quite encouraging as I would prefer a 315/75R16 (for both increased diff clearance and the increase in rolling circumference).Man I run 315/75r16s on mine and I have never had the boiled jellyfish feeling as you describe.there’s got to be more to that than just the simple fact of running 35s on a 16. I think you may have had some lingering suspension issues exacerbated by a larger tire.
IIRC 22mm lug wrench, 2 14mm box wrenches (driveshaft), 14mm socket and ratchet, snap ring pliers, and brass hammer.Does anyone know which tools are required to do this in the field? I’ve got 360k miles on my front diff and it’s the earlier 2-pinion design. Until I get the funds or time to finally install the lockers and regear kit, I feel like I’m on borrowed time.
Mine are on the stock 18s. I don’t think it’s the tires that are causing the issues you describe.That's really interesting.
I'm guessing you have good open road manners with 35s and can do a sudden lane change at high speed without being frightened..... which is awesome., but contrary to my extremely limited experience with the taller tyres.
Are yours 16 inch diameter rims or something bigger? I tried 34.6(?) inch tyres on a 16inch rim and it was like driving on a boiled jellyfish. I hated it and was genuinely scared, but can imagine 35" tyres on an 18 inch rim would be a different beast (and the tyres I tested were both well and unevenly worn)
On my turbo diesel, manual gearbox 105 (on 33's) I would like a sixth gear. The engine 'feels' right at about 80-90kmph in 5th gear. It'd be a better open road tourer if the same revs could be had at 110kmph.
There's 5th gear upgrade kits available to achieve something like that rev change, but I'm not in the market for that upgrade at this point. First I need to do some rust removal.
Also you can either buy a dummy drive flange by the 3D printing guy on here, or use some old metal ones that have been bored out to allow the front drive axles to stay stationary while the wheels rotate.IIRC 22mm lug wrench, 2 14mm box wrenches (driveshaft), 14mm socket and ratchet, snap ring pliers, and brass hammer.
Aftermarket CVs? OEM CV’s are pretty tough to break.ran 34 no problem. loved it. decided to regear my LX470 so i went with 35. afterwards issue after issue.. CV axle snapped at least twice just from normal driving (and some towing)...
going back to 34 when this set of tires wear out