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Spares for Offroad Shenanigans

Old Oct 20, 2022 | 08:59 AM
  #1  
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Default Spares for Offroad Shenanigans

So this weekend I was out an offroad park that ranged from easy service roads to level 5 trails. All I brought with me was my recovery kit that consisted of a couple shackles, some gloves, and a kinetic rope. It never occurred to me that I might actually need parts to get back running. I seen snapped axles, non-starting situations, and wheel bearing issues from a couple of different people while out there. One person said that he snaps his short side rear axle shaft quite regularly. Question is, should I be carrying a spare shaft? A serpentine belt? Maybe a crank position sensor? What all do ya'll carry for such excursions?

Pic of my wheel lift just because I think it looks cool.


 
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Old Oct 20, 2022 | 10:18 AM
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Alex_M's Avatar
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Crank sensor is always a good idea.

I personally keep a full set of spare axle shafts just in case. This is a hold over until I can save up and get the Ashcroft HD shafts. That said, wheeling stock open diffs I didn't carry any shafts. The weak point is usually more the spider gears in the stock diff, but it's not very realistic to keep a spare diff in the back of your rig.

Besides a crank sensor... a Gallon of oil and a couple gallons of water, a good tool set, a jack, heat shrink wire connectors, spare fuses and relays... That's a pretty fair list. Not a lot else will leave you stranded. Protecting axles is as much about smart throttle input as anything. Make a judgement about your driving style and go from there.

Edit: Cool picture by the way
 
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Old Oct 20, 2022 | 04:54 PM
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Prep your truck and keep up on maintenance,drive smart and control the throttle and you will need very few spares.
  • Hose clamps all sizes
  • Rotoflex and bolts
  • 1 or 2 quarts of oil
  • Gallon of AF
  • Rad cap
  • Air filter - just in case
  • Bailing wire
  • Muffler and Duct tape
  • Headlight and tail light bulb

    I carry some old cooling hoses on longer trips and my alternator in a bucket but that is it. The old adage as slow as possible and fast as required really makes a difference.
 
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Old Oct 20, 2022 | 06:17 PM
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Coil pack, cps, hoses, toolkit, rotoflex, serp belt.
 
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Old Oct 20, 2022 | 07:45 PM
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I saw ya out on the trails (I was in the Yellow XD). What I carry varies on where I'm going. For Big Bend for example I went full retard and still didn't have a few things I needed. At the 2022 HCRR event I packed much lighter spares, but my standard tools were the same along with the small clear tackle box that has a CPS, TPS, Fuel Rail Temp Sensor, with relays and a few other LR specific things. I also always carry my nanocom even when I'm in the D1 just in case someone in the group with a D2 has an issue.
 
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Old Oct 20, 2022 | 07:52 PM
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I forgot spare brake light switch
 
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Old Oct 30, 2022 | 10:33 AM
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So much more simple than when I’d do hard trails with my Jeep YJ back in the day. When I’d do the Rubicon with it I’d bring:
- axle shafts front and rear
- front and rear driveshafts
- yokes
- U joints
- U bolts (leaf spring suspension
- tie rod and drag link
- spider gears (I was running lunch box lockers)
- the ubiquitous electrical stuff
- of course duct tape and bailing wire

At one point or another I used all of those and every piece of recovery gear I would bring with the winch such as shackles, straps, ****** blocks, high lift jack, and whatever else.

I’ve never used the Discos for stuff that hard, and still have a heavily modified JKUR, so no need for lots of stuff on the trips I’ve done. I watched a couple videos of guys with D2s on the Rubicon. YIKES! I take enough damage on with the Jeeps, and the total abuse on a D2 just pains me.
 
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Old Oct 31, 2022 | 01:06 PM
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@longtallsally It really is all about line and throttle control, I see a lot of videos where pressing the skinny pedal to the floor is the solution to everything. Picking a good line, not the cool one and using only enough throttle to keep momentum works best. Unless you are playing in deep mud, then you will just break stuff.
 
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