Man you nailed it perfectly for me. I'm operating out of a 2 car garage. If I had a 40x40 shop, this would be an easier call.
I have a decently modest garage but would go absolutely insane for a proper shop... I keep trying to buy the 0.73 acre lot next to us but the owner simply won't sell it. It would absolutely turn into a 0.53 acre mini-farm, with a 0.20 acre shop smack in the middle
I keep going in circles because all the upgrades need to support a cohesive plan rather than just a collection of ideas and the upgrades not work together...
So the call I'm working through now is buying those rubicon axles from Baseline ($4K) or paying for a regear on my 30/44 ($3.5K)... I'd like to think...what can I do for $7K because that's about what I feel comfortable spending for my use case.
This reminds me of one of my favorite lines from a movie:
The problem with Jeeps, well any 4x4 really, is that it's really easy to get "scope creep", where you make some modifications that you end up liking, and then end up wanting to push further, which requires more modifications, which themselves need other supporting modifications to work properly, which then brings in a whole list of other considerations, and so on.
You need to be honest with yourself and your future needs. Are you looking for better gearings, some additional grip, and for something reliable to tackle most causal trails with on a good set of 33"s? Something "overbuilt" on 35"s? Something you can really stretch out on 37"s? Once you figure that out, you have to "commit" for at least some reasonable amount of time before considering something more. This way you can develop a plan and then stick to it, otherwise you'll be on tons and 42" stickies before you know it haha!
I really wanted to go the Dynatrac Trail Leader route and do all the things but that's no kidding $13K.
I found a UD60 front for essentially what it would have cost to build a SD60 myself, and then I did all the work to my 14B - and even then, I'm $10,477 into axles at this point, not including driveshafts or brake parts. Every time someone says they want "cheap" axle upgrades (or a "budget V8 swap"), I like sharing tidbits from my tracking spreadsheets that I've kept for the past rigs over the past decade or so. To make myself feel better, I sometimes "build" a new 392 JLUR and then add in the cost of Dynatracs or UD60's, plus the necessary supporting mods and I realize I'm still ~30% the cost of buying a new one and I feel a little better
