• Guest, UPDATE We went through the site migration runbook and completed all steps. We will need to complete the migration next week, but will leave the forums up for the weekend. A few days after maintenance, a major upgrade revision to the forum site will occur.
  • HTML tutorial

My 2wd xj until I can convert it to 4wd

Dead_Raven

Rank II

Enthusiast I

This is my 2001 xj. I'm in the very beginning of building it. But I have a general direction, just a slow grind to get their. Everything is stock as of now. As of now, I am chasing some small issues. Bought it about 3 months ago with 165k miles, no dents, good clear coat. Interior great condition no rips or tears.
 

Attachments

Downs

Rank V
Launch Member

Member III

Looking at how stuffed the tires are in the wheel wells, I would prioritize a suspension and steering overhaul. I'm willing to bet it's never been done in that Jeeps life. If you're wanting to stay mostly stock, go with the Upcountry spec suspension parts. It will gain you about 1 inch over stock (multiple inches from where the Jeep is currently sitting).
 

Ethan N

Local Expert, East Region USA
Member

Off-Road Ranger I

I agree with the above, get a parts rig and start swapping! Easy money.

I had a 96 XJ that thing was a nice little Jeep.
 

Wildcat-01

Rank II

Enthusiast III

For what it's worth, I wheeled a RWD Toyota T100 with minor lift, limited slip diff, slightly larger A/T tires and some minor trimming and had a blast with it. I had to yank myself out of a few sticky situations with a come-along winch, but it was fun.
By the time that I became a dad and had to reconsider my vehicle selection, I'd already had a D44 out of a K5 Blazer set aside for a Solid Axle Swap and was saving up to swap in a R151F granny transmission with a geared RF1A t-case.
If I were in your position, I'd start with a limited slip or locking diff, minor lift, and some BFGs and eventually upgrade to a 4x4 transmission and transfer case. That way you'll have traction at both driving wheels and gearing so you can do the majority of what a lightly built 4x4 can do. Plus, when you have SAS money, you already have the transmission and transfer case.
 
Top