Mullen
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2022
- Messages
- 157
I agree that prep is important and that high end parts on non-caged trucks is more prevalent today than it was 15 or 20 years ago, all while likely getting less prep. Today everyone has big bucks for forged wheels and fabbed rear ends on their $50k trucks, but decide not to cage for various reasons. Again, I waited many years to cage mine as I liked having it quiet in the cab. As soon as my daughter was ready to be in the truck off road, I decided it was cage time.I agree somewhat, you'll never hear me say a cage is a bad idea or unsafe. Now when it comes to "better parts on caged trucks" I don't fully agree. Billet hubs don't mean they are any better than OE parts, it just means they're "custom". This all comes down to the owner of the vehicle prepping their shit or even knowing how their parts work. I've seen wheels come off and go flying into crowds off of race trucks, dump trucks, go karts, and stock trucks. It boils down to someone prepping or not prepping their shit. Yes off-road parts fail, but in all my years in the off-road industry (18 this year) Knock on wood, I've never had any parts fail on my vehicle. Maybe that's luck, or maybe its because I'm really in tune with my vehicles and on top of keeping it prepped in good shape. I feel as though it used to be people built their own trucks so they generally knew how they worked went together, but as of late more and more people have gotten into off-road who didn't grow up doing it (which is fine) nor did they build their cars, they bought them done, or paid to have them built (which is again fine). When that's the case I feel like its the drivers responsibility to understand how their car works instead of just getting in and driving them. If you know your car well, you'll know when something doesn't feel right. This comes from dealing with a whole new customer base (in my job) that come from the car world and think their off-road vehicle is supposed to be bullet proof, not make any noise, and be able to race "the baja".
Your point about wheels coming off on race trucks is something that I had always stressed to my customer when I was building trucks - just because you're not racing, doesn't mean you can't roll just like the big boys. With that, I always recommended caging a truck right off, though very few listened.
After you cage your truck, you'll notice the handling dramatically improves. I couldn't believe the difference in my truck after I finished the cage. Safer + better handling - 420.69 hours of blood, sweat, and cussing - beer money during fab = net win.