- City
- Cincinnati
- State
- Oh
With the amount of (outstanding) work that you do, maybe you should consider it.



I didn't notice the rock rail pics. Where will the rear mount fall relative to the rear spring hanger?
Not to be dramatic, but the thing I've seen first hand with this style is a crack propagating between the edge of the rear spring hanger and the holes that were drilled to mount the rail, and the spring hanger punched it's way right up inside the frame. The setup on that Scrambler basically perforated the frame rail on both sides in two nice vertical lines that allowed it to happen. It looks like yours don't have the mounting holes above one another, but if I were you, I'd seriously consider fishplating the sides of the frame before you drill holes for these.
Maybe if they mount a long way from the spring hangers I wouldn't worry, but after seeing it live in person, I'm way leery of ever drilling on my frame now without doing reinforcement first.
Like I said, not to be dramatic and I'm sure most people would use them and never have an issue, but it was a pretty clean Scrambler that this happened on, not some rusty mess. I may have posted pics on here somewhere, it was a number of years back in NC. The guy was an occasional poster on here, this incident had him debating about selling, not sure what he ended up doing.
I have thought of this "issue" too.


I guess from the flex of the body tub, the sheet metal surrounding the bolts started to fatigue and stress cracks started radiating out from the bolt holes. We actually had to weld the sheet metal back together, and put plate steel reinforcement on the inside of the rocker panels, to prevent the cracks from spreading/starting again

With the amount of (outstanding) work that you do, maybe you should consider it.![]()
, BUT I am still a "big kid" myself, I sure don't want to raise one right now

though, didn't mean to start a protracted discussion, you're obviously thinking about it already How do they mount without through bolts? You drill/tap the one side of the frame rail?
And in no way am I saying body mount versions are perfect, they definitely have their own issues as you point out.
I disagree with the analogy to engine mounts for a number of reasons, mainly the frequency and magnitude of impact/fatigue the engine mounts see (through bolted with sleeves on both framerails with a brace underneath and the support of the tranny crossmember) is no comparison in my mind to what a spring mount can see under the dynamic weight of the entire Jeep while wheeling or the rocker would see when impacting an obstacle and taking the weight of that side of the Jeep. I think you're on the right track with the idea of drilling through and sleeving the holes.
I gave mythough, didn't mean to start a protracted discussion, you're obviously thinking about it already
that's all I wanted to point out.




Ah, ok, that's a good example to talk through.
On the shackle hangers, there's inserts (basically full on nuts) on the inside of the frame rails for those bolts to thread into. Very far cry from just the thickness of the steel in the frame, probably at least 5-8 times the thickness of the frame plate. IIRC, it's a through hole through the frame plate, the bolt never touches it, all the force is taken by the clamping force on a decent size area around the hole and weld on the beefy inserts. I had one of these inserts break loose and spin on me when I went to do the rear HD hangers, so I had to fish it out and weld up a replacement.
I like your crush sleeve/through bolt idea. Would you weld the sleeves in? That would be the ultimate IMO.
I do like the sound of their warranty and they do look good mounted. Very XJ-like.


Have you thought of adding slightly larger plates to the mounting ends of the rocker guards to butt up against the frame rail on the outside, then use another thick plate on the inside of the frame rail to bolt and "sandwich" the frame rail? You wouldn't have to do any drilling into your frame this way! Having to drill twelve holes per side sounds like a PITA! I know there are several rocker guards on the market which mount like this for other Jeep models. I have no personal experience with any rocker guards that mount this way so I can't say how well it would hold up but it is another option that may work for you with little fabricating. On my '85 CJ8 "Spring Special" w/ postal-world cab top I am currently building I am considering rocker guards with side steps that mount this way; that is if I don't use the original style steps.
I need to mock one up to see what I can do
Picture of two sending units: The NOS Stewart Warner is at top, the replacement Crown version is on the bottom. They have identical dimensions, even though the picture makes them look like they have different length float arms. The Stewart Warner version's float is supposedly superior to the Crown versions plastic float. You could probably easily adapt the old style float to the Crown sending unit with a little soldering.
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just pop the float off. no soldering required.







