- Location
- Eastern Wisconsin
(New Member) I have been working on a 1992 XJ for about a year now. It is going to be a daily driver (in Wisconsin) when I'm done. I don't need another trail rig. I don't need another stock Jeep or Willys. I have plenty already. However, this is my first XJ. I am the second owner of this tired Jeep. It was exceptionally clean until a Moose decided to bump into it while I was driving home from Wyoming. Amazingly, it only damaged the passenger fender, door, and windshield. I need to stress, this is not a trail rig. I don't want to chop it up, or put a big lift on it, or make it look like DeXJ's stuff. It will be a daily driven pavement princess with the ability to handle mild offroad stuff. On a RestoMod, I prefer to use as many factory parts as possible. When aftermarket parts must be used, I try to make them look stock.
Initially, I was just going to get it fixed and drive it, but then the damned internal slave cylinder went out. I converted it to an external and that started my journey into modifying it. I decided to do a RestoMod and create a Rubicon XJ and make it look like it was built that way from the factory. No crazy lifts or axle trusses. No aftermarket bumpers. No exterior armor, except for the IronRock molded rocker guards and frame stiffeners. I can make those look stock and they strengthen the body. I am going to try to fab up a stock looking front bumper from 3/16s plate. If it works, I'll do the rear as well. Otherwise, it will be stock tin.
PLAN: I'm planning to run 31" tires on JK Rubicon wheels. Why, because I like the way it looks. The entire Jeep will be painted (haven't picked a color yet). The interior will look stock, but will have several upgrades. There will be no backseat, that space is for my dog kennel. The front seats are coming from a Mercedes, the dash has already been restored and upgraded to all dimmable LED bulbs. There will be a lot of sound deadening added to quiet down this tin can: doors, floors, overhead, and hood. Tint all of the rear windows. Add a multi step anti-theft system. I'm swapping the transfer case from a 231J to a 242J and will add an SYE. Add a few discrete skid plates to keep with the Rubicon theme. And, rebuild and upgrade the engine... no swaps, no stroker.
AXLES: I have several front and rear axles to chose from. An XJ D35 with 3.08 gears. a C8.25 with 3.08 gears, a TJ D44 w/discs, Detroit, and 4.56 gears, and an JK Rubi D44 w/3.73 gears. For the front, I have a low pinion D30 w/Detroit and 4.56 gears, I have two HP D30s, one w/3.08 and one w/3.55 gears. I have a set of welded/converted WJ knuckles I can use on the D30s. I also have a JK Rubi D44 with no gears or diff. I have two different sets of JK Rubi wheels that both look good on the XJ.
DONE SO FAR: I put Skyjacker TJ 2.5" dual rate springs on the front and Deaver 700 ppi leafs on the back. It sits perfectly level front to rear. It's basically 2" higher than stock in the front and and 1" in the rear. Though that's just a guess. The original springs were very tired and compressed when I picked up the XJ. It sat very, very low. On the bright side, It turns the XJ wheels and tires and articulates without any bind or rub, thanks to running WJ lower front control arms. I tested it with the JK Rubicon stock tires (285/70R17 - 33") and the front rubbed the inner fender liner when turning. The back rubbed when pulling into a steep driveway. Then I tested it with 18 JK wheels and tires (255/70R18 - 32") This was much better, but still rubbed in the front when turning up a drive way or pulling up onto a small (12") rock. The rear did not rub at all. So, I can either lift it more, or run smaller tires. For now, I'm going with smaller tires. This was done with 1.5" hubcentric wheel adaptors. I would have used 1" adaptors, but the rear wheels only had an 1/8" clearance from the leaf springs due to the deep backspacing.
DILEMMA... I can (1) Spend money regearing the shit D30 and C8.25, then converting the front to WJ brakes and the rear to KJ discs, then using wheel adaptors to use the JK wheels... or (2) just convert the JK axles I already have to fit the XJ. Damn, if it were only that easy. The XJ axles with wheel adaptors on them are 63" hub to hub. with this set up, the JK Rubi wheels and tires fit under the factory fender flares. However, with the wider axles, they will stick out about 3/4 of an inch on each side. I simulated this by stacking wheel spacers in the front to create a 65" wide axle. (No, I did not try to drive it this way) I discovered the tires will not turn in either direction without hitting the fender. The issue here is the front wheel opening becomes to small to accommodate a 32" tire and a 65" axle. The second issue is up travel. With the wider axle, the top of the tires would hit the fender when I articulate or hit a hard bump. Being that the XJ was designed to use 28.5" tires, the use of 31 or 32" tires on the JK axles and a minimal lift setup will require front wheel opening to be bigger... and I want to use factory fender flares. If anyone has modified one of these fenders to make it look stock, I'd love to see it. My though was to open it up by 1" in all directions. This would make the opening 2" wider and 1" taller. As for the fender flare, plastic weld two or more together.
AXLES: I'm leaning toward the JK D44s, but that creates a whole different group of problems. New steering, new drive shafts, upgraded master cylinder, modifying the wheel openings, and modifying stock fender flares. (yes, stock). I'll need to find a 3 1/8" axle perch kit for the rear, and modify the front to fit properly. Then I have to tackle the e-brake cables. Then there is the front steering; the issue here is that all of the steering kits and front swap kits are for 3.5 inch or higher lifts. Sorry, but no... I don't want to hear "You can't." I want to hear how I can without lifting it any further.
SO... has anyone had success with using WJ tie rods or drag links on the JK axles? Both axles are 65" wms to wms. I could run a stock JK tie rod, but that still leaves the drag link issue to solve. I'm guessing a WJ unit will likely work with a little modification. Then there is the track bar. All of the aftermarket stuff is telling me I need to lift it higher, so no.... that crap is out. not to mention most of it is way over priced. As for the axle mounts and spring buckets... I'll probably fab that up to look stock. Or, I'll do what everyone says I can't and just mount it as it is. The axle mount points are only 3/4 of an inch wider center to center for both the top and bottom brackets. The big concern is the spring buckets.
Thoughts, suggestions, and wise-ass comments welcome.
Initially, I was just going to get it fixed and drive it, but then the damned internal slave cylinder went out. I converted it to an external and that started my journey into modifying it. I decided to do a RestoMod and create a Rubicon XJ and make it look like it was built that way from the factory. No crazy lifts or axle trusses. No aftermarket bumpers. No exterior armor, except for the IronRock molded rocker guards and frame stiffeners. I can make those look stock and they strengthen the body. I am going to try to fab up a stock looking front bumper from 3/16s plate. If it works, I'll do the rear as well. Otherwise, it will be stock tin.
PLAN: I'm planning to run 31" tires on JK Rubicon wheels. Why, because I like the way it looks. The entire Jeep will be painted (haven't picked a color yet). The interior will look stock, but will have several upgrades. There will be no backseat, that space is for my dog kennel. The front seats are coming from a Mercedes, the dash has already been restored and upgraded to all dimmable LED bulbs. There will be a lot of sound deadening added to quiet down this tin can: doors, floors, overhead, and hood. Tint all of the rear windows. Add a multi step anti-theft system. I'm swapping the transfer case from a 231J to a 242J and will add an SYE. Add a few discrete skid plates to keep with the Rubicon theme. And, rebuild and upgrade the engine... no swaps, no stroker.
AXLES: I have several front and rear axles to chose from. An XJ D35 with 3.08 gears. a C8.25 with 3.08 gears, a TJ D44 w/discs, Detroit, and 4.56 gears, and an JK Rubi D44 w/3.73 gears. For the front, I have a low pinion D30 w/Detroit and 4.56 gears, I have two HP D30s, one w/3.08 and one w/3.55 gears. I have a set of welded/converted WJ knuckles I can use on the D30s. I also have a JK Rubi D44 with no gears or diff. I have two different sets of JK Rubi wheels that both look good on the XJ.
DONE SO FAR: I put Skyjacker TJ 2.5" dual rate springs on the front and Deaver 700 ppi leafs on the back. It sits perfectly level front to rear. It's basically 2" higher than stock in the front and and 1" in the rear. Though that's just a guess. The original springs were very tired and compressed when I picked up the XJ. It sat very, very low. On the bright side, It turns the XJ wheels and tires and articulates without any bind or rub, thanks to running WJ lower front control arms. I tested it with the JK Rubicon stock tires (285/70R17 - 33") and the front rubbed the inner fender liner when turning. The back rubbed when pulling into a steep driveway. Then I tested it with 18 JK wheels and tires (255/70R18 - 32") This was much better, but still rubbed in the front when turning up a drive way or pulling up onto a small (12") rock. The rear did not rub at all. So, I can either lift it more, or run smaller tires. For now, I'm going with smaller tires. This was done with 1.5" hubcentric wheel adaptors. I would have used 1" adaptors, but the rear wheels only had an 1/8" clearance from the leaf springs due to the deep backspacing.
DILEMMA... I can (1) Spend money regearing the shit D30 and C8.25, then converting the front to WJ brakes and the rear to KJ discs, then using wheel adaptors to use the JK wheels... or (2) just convert the JK axles I already have to fit the XJ. Damn, if it were only that easy. The XJ axles with wheel adaptors on them are 63" hub to hub. with this set up, the JK Rubi wheels and tires fit under the factory fender flares. However, with the wider axles, they will stick out about 3/4 of an inch on each side. I simulated this by stacking wheel spacers in the front to create a 65" wide axle. (No, I did not try to drive it this way) I discovered the tires will not turn in either direction without hitting the fender. The issue here is the front wheel opening becomes to small to accommodate a 32" tire and a 65" axle. The second issue is up travel. With the wider axle, the top of the tires would hit the fender when I articulate or hit a hard bump. Being that the XJ was designed to use 28.5" tires, the use of 31 or 32" tires on the JK axles and a minimal lift setup will require front wheel opening to be bigger... and I want to use factory fender flares. If anyone has modified one of these fenders to make it look stock, I'd love to see it. My though was to open it up by 1" in all directions. This would make the opening 2" wider and 1" taller. As for the fender flare, plastic weld two or more together.
AXLES: I'm leaning toward the JK D44s, but that creates a whole different group of problems. New steering, new drive shafts, upgraded master cylinder, modifying the wheel openings, and modifying stock fender flares. (yes, stock). I'll need to find a 3 1/8" axle perch kit for the rear, and modify the front to fit properly. Then I have to tackle the e-brake cables. Then there is the front steering; the issue here is that all of the steering kits and front swap kits are for 3.5 inch or higher lifts. Sorry, but no... I don't want to hear "You can't." I want to hear how I can without lifting it any further.
SO... has anyone had success with using WJ tie rods or drag links on the JK axles? Both axles are 65" wms to wms. I could run a stock JK tie rod, but that still leaves the drag link issue to solve. I'm guessing a WJ unit will likely work with a little modification. Then there is the track bar. All of the aftermarket stuff is telling me I need to lift it higher, so no.... that crap is out. not to mention most of it is way over priced. As for the axle mounts and spring buckets... I'll probably fab that up to look stock. Or, I'll do what everyone says I can't and just mount it as it is. The axle mount points are only 3/4 of an inch wider center to center for both the top and bottom brackets. The big concern is the spring buckets.
Thoughts, suggestions, and wise-ass comments welcome.
