WoodsTruck
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 12, 2013
- Messages
- 1,026
Motorized wheelbarrows make yard work funner.
Yeah, I’m not thrilled about the yard work but my future daughter-in-law is pretty stressed and I can’t stand seeing her like that so I want to do what I can to help, even if it is yard work.
Tomorrow will consist of removing a tree stump, repairing the area and then hauling bark. Gonna be a long day.
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It's still better than having anyone step on your lawn. I see what you're doing, crafty!
Yard work for the homeowner is a necessary evil if you want your property to look good. A little streaming music and a hoppy beverage always makes it go better. You go Mike!
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Motorized wheelbarrows make yard work funner.
Motorized wheelbarrows make yard work funner.
No good deed ever goes unpunished! You sir are a great soon to be FIL.... !
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I was waiting on some before and after shots of the yard!
I think whenever Mike sells any of his personal vehicles, GJ members should get first dibs. no trade in or local private selling.
While pictures would have been nice, just the satisfaction of helping your son and future DIL move forward to a great future would be enough for me.
Agreed.
This whole experience has been an opportunity for me to pause, reflect back on my past, who I am today and more importantly, who I want to be tomorrow.
This past month has definitely been an emotional roller coaster for me and I think I have been blessed with a tremendous opportunity to grow as a person.
Hi Mike, interesting read on your experience with suspension travel ratios. It seems the OEM set them up with very little drop. Perhaps this limits body roll at high speeds.
When I built the lift for my 2014 F250 the recommended Bilsien shock had less than 1/2" of droop. This seemed completely wrong to me so I bought the next longer shock and tuned the bumpstops for 3" down / 5" up
I've been shopping for coilovers for my 1972 F250 project. Given the adjustability of ride height and spring rate, I can set them to whatever. The vendor I have been talking to suggested 35 down /65 up. Since ride height is somewhat know to clear tires, I'm trying to determine how tall the shock towers need to be to get my ratio close to target. My goal is to get the truck to ride best on crappy dirt roads at medium speeds.
When I first built my Jeep back in 2011 I wanted as much flex as possible but didn't give as much thought as I should have to the stresses imposed on the components. I had a couple more inches of flex than I do now but ultimately tore the bracketry off of my axles due to the stresses involved with that much flex. During this time of beefing up my brackets on my axles I also started using limiting straps and pairing the proper length shocks to my builds.
Mike You do great projects and everyone enjoys following. You might have broken a rule of Garage journal . While posting on your son home purchase and tool box relocation. There has been no mention of what size garage came with his house . Good luck with the wedding preparations .

This is something I have been working on as well. I like to say I like who I am, but more importantly I love who I'm becoming. Life by the inch.
I really appreciate your thread and the detail you include with your projects. Keep up the good work.
Hope the wedding goes well and becomes a special day for all.

We all should be striving to be better versions of ourselves but I fall short more than I care to. Progress, not perfection is what I guess I need to remember.
.....I hope all of that made sense and I appreciate you sharing Justin.
Yes, thanks for the info and your experience. The truck won't need a lot of flex or travel really, so I'm planning a radius arm and 12" Fox coilover up front. Probably only get 9-10" of usable travel. Looking to keep overall height and COG as low as possible so going to section/stretch the fenders to make room for rubber. At least that is the plan...
In my experience slow speed and rock crawlers do much better with more droop than bump which allows more flex and stability. Desert trucks I setup closer to 60 bump/40 droop travel which is needed when hitting the face of a whoop at speed. Up travel keeps vehicle planted without upsetting the chassis as if you were to hit the bumpstop.
In my experience slow speed and rock crawlers do much better with more droop than bump which allows more flex and stability. Desert trucks I setup closer to 60 bump/40 droop travel which is needed when hitting the face of a whoop at speed. Up travel keeps vehicle planted without upsetting the chassis as if you were to hit the bumpstop.


Nice! I’m gonna go out on a limb here and guess that the silver one is your sons? My next one will be either a streetglide or a breakout, probably the streetglide.
Thought I’d ask this one out in the open since others may be interested in the answer -
Are there better wire looms (split or otherwise) and heat shrink tube? ‘Commercial Grade” or heavy duty? Where do you source yours? The auto parts store stuff seems like cheap junk.
Yes, definitely. I get my basic automotive stuff at Waytek and its far better quality for cheaper than the auto parts store. They sell different grades of each product you're asking about, so you may need to do some reading on the differences.
Thought I’d ask this one out in the open since others may be interested in the answer -
Are there better wire looms (split or otherwise) and heat shrink tube? ‘Commercial Grade” or heavy duty? Where do you source yours? The auto parts store stuff seems like cheap junk.
Now wheres Mike been? Wheeling I hope...




















