bogged wrote:GUJohnno wrote:You would be better NOT getting lockers and learning as much as you can and get used to your vehicle, it's size and knowing that you can place your wheels where you want them. Lockers can get you further into the sh** and without knowing what your doing is asking for trouble.
I agree. I find it hard that people honestly believe fully kitting out their truck with every option possible can make them a better driver.
You will become a much better driver learning to drive a stock truck to its limits, then working up in stages with mods/accessories than you would the other way.
Watch a driver thats 'old school', as Johnno mentions, they actually DRIVE the section. They understand wheel placement, they actually pick their line. Not just wack in lockers, and sink the size 14 to the floor and hope.
Competly agree with the above.
When i started offroading most of the fourbys in our club were open diff , leaf sprung vehicals.
most of the high country tracks were "bastards"(original dingo hill, butcher country, calidonia, the list could go on for ever, tracks that could have you on them all day and sometimes into the night.
"That is were we learned to drive, not with 6 inch coils and twin difflocks doing the work for you.
I often say to the yough guys coming through the club with their first car being a GQ shorty with coils and a great LSD and 4 wheel disks ansd power steer." You have not done your apprentiship untill you muscle around a fourwheel drum brake leaf sprung 40 series".
The skills and the basics need to be learned before all the gizmos go in.
i wouldnt have the skills and experience that i have today if i started with the quality of trucks easly afforded today IE Coils and twin difflocks.
Atleast even though i also have all the goodies on my own truck, i know that if the airlockes fail on a hard core drive i still know what to do.
Cheers Grant
GU III TD42T UFI18G Cross Country IC, 20 PSI. Neeeeeed mooooore Fueeeeeel.