Cool. Where were those photos taken? What that in Uwharrie? I'm always looking for more places to go 'wheeling around here. It seems that my best bet so far has been Fort Bragg.
Do you have a rear sway bar disconnect? I bet you'd get a lot more articulation for your rear axle if you could disconnect that rear bar (it wouldn't hurt to be able to disconnect your front one also).
Not Uwharrie. It is a local place in Durham Co. called Kemp Road. Mostly logging trails. Bigger trucks and erosion have kicked in and rutted things out pretty good. I still spend most of my time on the street, so for now the sway bar(s) are staying. I was pleased with my truck overall, esp. considering that I am front axle deprived.
Hey Jadcock, nice tailgate. Where did you say you live? Could you wax it sometime before next week?
__________________
Aaron Ford
95 2WD Nissan PU E
2002 Oldsmobile Intrigue GX
"The hard part about playing chicken is knowing when to flinch" Scott Glenn in The Hunt for Red October
__________________
Aaron Ford
95 2WD Nissan PU E
2002 Oldsmobile Intrigue GX
"The hard part about playing chicken is knowing when to flinch" Scott Glenn in The Hunt for Red October
Nah, I was helping someone move (not rare in a college town). Tailgate was down, no rearward view. Looked behind me before getting in the truck, and some chick pulled into the lot and parked in the middle. I didn't see her til I backed into her rear tire. Scuffed the rubber on her tire, bent my tailgate. I have been soldiering on with a tetanous nightmare from a friends 86.5. Still looking for a new one, but bigger fish slowed the effort.
__________________
Aaron Ford
95 2WD Nissan PU E
2002 Oldsmobile Intrigue GX
"The hard part about playing chicken is knowing when to flinch" Scott Glenn in The Hunt for Red October
Originally posted by aaronford Nah, I was helping someone move (not rare in a college town).
Tell me about it -- I moved every summer for the five years I lived in Blacksburg, and I didn't have my truck for any of them. Finally moved down to NC (hopefully to stay for a while) and had would have had to take about 16 loads in the Nissan, so we rented a truck for that. It earns its keep every day, though, from bringing home screen doors from Home Depot, hauling brush away from hurricane Isabel, and of course, taking me farther into the woods than any vehicle I've owned before.