Monday, October 26, 2015

The Basics of Rock Crawling















There are many different types of terrains you can take your off-road vehicle on that are fun and unique in their own way. Some different types are the snow, mud, water, sand and dirt, but I am going to focus on rocks especially rock crawling. Unlike many of the other terrains, you do not want to go very fast over these obstacles due to the severe body damage they can cause. This and some other factors cause rock crawling to be harder to the average driver than it seems, and unlike other off-roading terrains it is more about skill and ability rather than force.















First, you have to have a correctly built vehicle to be able to actually make it through a rock crawling trail. The vehicle has to have enough clearance to make it over the obstacles and you have to have low enough gears to not bounce around causing damage and getting you nowhere but stuck. Without a lift, you would scrape the underside of the vehicle and likely break something or get high centered. Skid plates and Rock Sliders can also be used to protect your vehicle's body from damage if it hits the rocks by adding an extra protective layer of thick metal.

Other thinks you should add to your vehicle to allow you to rock crawl better could be low gears or lockers. Low gears would allow your vehicle to slowly crawl over the rocks without sliding off of them. This can happen by allowing your engine to slow your vehicle rather than using your brakes or clutch. It would also help if you aired down your tires, which would allow yourself to stick to the rock due to having more rubber on the rock and make the whole ride a lot smoother. Eventually, the price will continue to rise if you get lockers, but this is an item that would benefit your vehicle because it would allow you to climb rocks you couldn't have before by making both axels spin at all times. To avoid things like this you have to have a built vehicle and have some skill (not luck).












Second, you have to have the skill to go off-roading and it is even more important to have  the skill to go rock crawling. One huge difference between easier trails and rock crawling is that in rock crawling you want to go over the rocks instead of trying to squeeze around them. Rock Crawling is all about the flex in the suspension and knowing how big of a rock you can climb before you roll it. Rock crawling is not something you can ever hope to learn in a few minutes but is more like a skill you continue to develop and try to improve on after many years. Some simple tips you would want to know before wheeling is to try to always keep your vehicle balanced, go slow enough to avoid spinning, know how to pick a line your vehicle will make, and like I have always been told, know your vehicle and its limits.

Overall these are the most basic steps to rock crawling:

1. Build your vehicle
2. Pick the right line
3. Stay on top on the rocks
4. Go Slow
5. Have fun






Thursday, September 24, 2015

Summer of Rock Crawling up at Dinkey Creek




My last post was a few months ago, so for those who do not know me I am a fifteen-year-old Sophmore at Windsor High School. This blog is about the trips me and my family take to go rock crawling with our friends. During this year and the beginning of next year, I am going to be building my 95 YJ jeep wrangler. So far I have most of the parts to build it, but I still need some parts that I'm going to get this year. 




















This summer I have been very busy, one of my trips was to the Dinkey Creek Wilderness area to go on some of the trails. On this trip my uncle went and he only had a stock 07 JK jeep wrangler. We took him up to Bald Mountain, part of Dusy Ershim, Brewer, Mirror and Strawberry Lakes. The last time I went to this area was two years ago and many of the trails have changed slightly. Bald Mountain had many new trails off of it that we have not gone on before that were marked. This trip was fun and my dad let me drive his Jeep (in the pictures above) on most of the trails. One of the best parts of this trip was that no one broke anything.

Soon I will start building my Jeep, so hopefully next year I will be driving my own vehicle and going on more trails. In a couple of weeks, I will be going on the Rubicon and then I will hopefully have my Jeep done after that, but before the next trip.



Monday, April 13, 2015

Building a Custom Roll Cage




 
First I got forty feet of one and three quarter inch hollow steel pipe that my dad had at our friend Richs' house. We then bent the pipe using a pipe bender for the main supports. We had to make two identical pieces and two cross bars between to support the jeep if it ever rolled. It took us multiple tries to bend the pipe to the correct angle the first time, but the second time it only took a couple of minutes.
 
 
 


We then put small tack welds to temporarily hold the pipe in place. I wanted extra support so we added two bars from the support at the windshield to the main support in the middle. We had to make sure the angles left enough room for passengers and drivers head, but not too much to stop the soft top from fitting. It took us multiple tries to get the pipes lined up perfectly and clean off the paint and rust so the welds would hold.

 
After the front was held together we cut two pieces for the back, making them line up with the center supports. They hole had to have the right angle to fit the steel supports and still provide support. We added one more bar across the back behind the back seat but had to angle it out to avoid hitting passengers heads. We then welded everything in and created two small handles on the roll bar for the front driver and passenger seat.


Tuesday, January 6, 2015

It's 2015: What am I going to do this year


 
 
 
 It's now a new year. Time for a resolution. Why not make a plan for what I'm going to try to accomplish this year on and with my Jeep. It's time to start building, time to make my imagination a reality. It's time to put money into the car. Anyone can accomplish anything if they put their time and effort into it so why not lift a Jeep. If you know how to you could even build it from parts like I am. It is 2015 a new year, a new start anything could happen and anything could change.

Monday, December 8, 2014

Winter Wheeling
















Many people go wheeling during the winter.
If there is snow people want up  in the mountains.
I often go wheeling in the snow for a day trip with my family and friends.
We go up near Lake Pillsberry and have fun going on dirt roads covered with snow.
Sometimes the snow isn't compressed so it is easy to get stuck even in a lifted vehical.
It has not been snowing much for the previous few years so we don't go as often as we use to.
It is one of my family traditions that we do every year there is snow.
There is a lot of snow this year so we might be able to go and take my jeep
.













 
 
Wheeling in the snow can be dificult because it is loose.
It is easy to get lost because the snow hids the trail too.
You could also hit a rock you didn't see because of the snow,
 and your tires are always wet so they slip.
 
 
 
Have fun and do something you love to do over the holidays.
Try something knew and make new traditions.


Sunday, October 26, 2014

How to Replace a Broken Axle


Begin by loosening the lug nuts but don't take them off. You would do this so it is easier to take the lug nuts off when the tire is in the air because if you don't the tire spins.

You would then use a jack to lift your vehicle up so you can remove the tire.

Remove the loosened lug nuts and then remove the tire.















Then take the two bolts holding the brake caliper off but don't remove the brake line. You would then remove the disk brake.
















After that you would remove the carter key and then the large hub nut. After the large nut is out you would remove the three bolts on the inside of the outer C that hold the hub freeing it so it can be removed.

You would pull the broken axle out of the housing and replace it with your unbroken replacement.
















Lastly reassemble it and you can continue your trail.

Monday, September 22, 2014

I got a Jeep

"A major difference in the 1986-1995 [YJ Jeep Wrangler] models were the rectangular headlights, which reverted to rounded ones in the TJ and then JK versions." (Wikipedia-Jeep wrangler) The previous Jeep Wranglers, CJ models, have round headlights as well as newer models. The YJ Jeeps are unique in a lot of ways, but the easiest way to tell the difference is the headlights. I have just purchased a 1995 Jeep Wrangler and am going to upgrade it. My blog is about the experiences that will happen.

I got the Jeep on September first two thousand and fourteen. Two days earlier  I was out at my grandpa's ranch sitting at the table. My dad was looking through the newspaper and told me there was a Jeep for sale in Petaluma. I assumed it would be expensive like most jeeps but he said they were only asking for 3400 dollars! My dad ripped out the information and that Monday, the first, I called them and asked if the jeep was still for sale. It was so my dad drove me there and after test driving it I bought it.

I was so excited to own my first car. The Jeep was in decent shape, only a few minor dents and a few spots where the paint was chipping. It is blue and a small 4.0 liter engine which won't let me drive very fast. I am only fourteen so I have a long time to go before I can drive, but the jeep is being built now. I am not waiting and I am not going to rush to finish the Jeep.