now that's the best vehicle i've seen on this thread. to be honest, i don't have much use for the current pickups or jeeps.
happy trails
As long as the new Jeeps come with the shimmy shimmy cocoa pop Death Wobble I'll consider it.
What exactly is "death wobble"? I've seen the term mentioned on Jeep forums (usually with reference to one with a lift kit), but in 20+ years and 300+ k miles of Jeep ownership have never experienced it.
OH my - you haven't lived, until you've had the "death wobble" in a Jeep. I put large, wide tires on the '75 CJ 5 I had. Helped when going thru deep mud. At certain speeds - hit a bump and you felt like you were about to be thrown off the road. I cured it with new heavy duty king pin bearings and really cranking down on it. Also heavy, after market front steering linkages, track bar and wheel bearings. The quickest way to cure this death wobble - hit and hold the breaks.
Never had it in the GPW or CJ5. Had it in a Ford F250 with minor lift and 35's. Steering stabilizer and alignment fixed that.
Bingo ! We have a winner for identifying the root cause. Keeping the drag link level decouples a front wheel vertical input from an axle lateral input. So, you raise the drag link on the axle or drop the pitman arm ball from the steering gear to make the link level. Check out the videos on Youtube because there you can see how the motor plays a part in this, too. I suspect that the large forces involves in this form of shimmy can break a motor mount as well as failing the splined shaft on the pitman arm at the steering gear. Yes, the caster inducing forces, weak steering gear structure and worn out ball joints on the linkage parts make this problem worse. Dealers recommend new high friction parts and stronger steering dampers, but the root cause will only make the new parts wear out all over again.
Any body who would regularly try to tow 7000#'s with that needs their head examined. Same thing with all the mid-size trucks, completely ridiculous for realistic tow ratings. I also wouldn't tow 12000#'s with a half-ton, with the exception of perhaps the 3.5EB Ford. Makes for good marketing tho.
In every way my 2011 F150 blows my 1980 F250 out of the water. The F150 has bigger brakes, doesn't have holes cut into the frame like the F20 (done to reduce weight, and likely to buckle), the 400 CID engine in my F250 is rated at 153hp, 300ftpt while the F150's engine is rated at 365hp and 420ftpt. The F250 does have a full floating Dana60 rear end, which is superior to my semi-floating 9" F150, but still the weights of the trucks are similiar. Meanwhile I regularly see 16-18mpg and 8-10mpg when towing 8-10,000 pounds and around 13mpg towing boats. My F250 gets at best 12mpg empty on the highway and much less when pulling a load of any kind. The F250 does benefit from load range E tires which theoretically should wear longer than the light truck tires on the F150, but don't because the F250 cups the front tires no matter how it is aligned increasing tire wear due to the 4WD design of the independent front suspension.
I think people are thinking is that light trucks are still light trucks, but by weight, newer light trucks have been creeping up and are well into the specs of 80s and 90s three-quarter and one-ton pickup trucks. Meanwhile our new three-quarter and one-ton trucks ratings have also gone through the roof.