skruffysam
New member
keep an eye out for suds n grub's in your area and then you can see the different lifts and talk to the owners about how they perform both on and off road.
Rog... will do!
keep an eye out for suds n grub's in your area and then you can see the different lifts and talk to the owners about how they perform both on and off road.
Rog... will do!
If you were in Fort Worth I would take you for a ride.
For comparison sake, you could always swing by Off Road Evolution in Fullerton and ask them to give you a ride in one of their rigs. They do this all the time and it'll at least give you a point of reference.
Oh sweet... I might have to do that!
If you do, please let them know I sent ya![]()
I've had the RK 3.5" X factor kit on my JKU for about a year, I have ridden and driven in many setups.
My thoughts...
I love my RK setup. The quality of parts is great and seem to be very well built. The 3.5" nets about 3.75-4". If you purchase a new kit (not used or purchased in the last 7 months) you will receive the triple rate coil springs which helps with ride quality. The jeep flexes pretty well and feels very stable through things. I, however, do not attribute this to only RK since I believe my shocks/tire combo provides the ride I was looking for more than the RK kit itself.
I believe that you can piece meal or buy a kit for cheaper that will provide you the same benefits as the x factor kit. My experience has shown me that its a full package deal. One big thing, if DD'ing, that will change your ride is the shocks. I paired mine up with Rancho 9000's. Also, wheel/tire combo will have a drastic affect on street-ability--I went with the duratracs and a buddy has Toyo MTs...his does better in mud but mine is better on the road. Another thing to get is the adjustable control arms. The buddy, previously mentioned, has a Rough Country 4" lift and I think could benefit heavily from adjustable control arms and different shocks. His ride would probably be the same with control arms and shock change.
You can get the same ride quality and performance by going with pretty much any kit, ensuring to get adjustable control arms, and the correct shocks for your need. I've had numerous people mention that RK's stuff is supposed to be stiff and not good for DD'ing. This might have been true with the old coils that RK put in their kits (no longer) and depends on their shock choice.
I set mine up with DDing in mind first. I'm running RK 3.5" X Factor, Rancho Shocks, 325/65 Duratracs and the thing is smooth as glass and flexes really well on the weekends. You can obtain this ride without spending as much though. I'm happy with what I have because I got a killer deal on the x factor kit ($1250) but would have looked at other kits harder if I was spending the 1800-2000 MSRP.
I run the rk 3.5 mid arm x factor as well and I've had it on my jeep for 11 months now and I love it, beefy control arms and track bars, I run mine with bilstein 5100s and I paid 1700 for it through 4ws.com and I would recommend the lift
Definitely a quality kit. I've ridden and heard the the 5100's are somewhat stiff. Your thoughts?
Definitely a quality kit. I've ridden and heard the the 5100's are somewhat stiff. Your thoughts?
RK makes decent lifts, on par with Synergy, far better than the cheap brands (Pro Comp, BDS, Zone, and the like). Better than the mid-range brands like Metalcloak and Teraflex as well in my opinion (though I do like the Metalcloak springs, but that's about it). The RK Krawler Joint (think that's what they are calling it these days) is a huge and I mean huge improvement over their older joints but not quite Johnny Joint good. The triple rate springs are a massive improvement over their older springs but are still more sports car to EVO Plushride Cadillac. My springs were purchase 8 months or so ago so I got one of their early triple rate coils, I've heard they've continued to tweak spring rates but have no independent confirmation of this, given this, I'd take any comment from someone owning a lift more than 6 months old with a grain of salt as a new lift could potentially ride meaningfully different (my comments included). Customer service is nearly on par with EVO which is best in class in my book.
Ran their 2.5 kit for a while on my 2009 before selling it and going a different direction. Went with EVO and a few others on my current build. Wasn't dissatisfied with RK, but I feel there are better options out there, especially when talking coilovers (reserving judgement on the RK coilovers as they supposedly changed their mounts since the last time I saw a kit which, again supposedly, fixed the sky high ride height problem).