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Anyone that buys an $80k Expedition planning to do some serious off roading, is a complete idiot.
If you're looking for the beginnings of a rock crawler, then you know enough about fabrication to keep you from starting here.
As far as towing, it's rated for 9k and that's plenty for everything I want to tow.
Oh, I know what people put into building off road machines and rock crawlers. I've built a truck to be quick and also off road capable (not single purpose, still streetable). Even keeping it mild enough to stay on the street legally, it still sucked up nearly $20k above the purchase price of only $16k, and that was 20 years ago.Although I agree with this, you should see what some people put into Jeep Wranglers to go rock climbing.
I never thought I'd see people pay $80k for a Ford SUV in my lifetime.
Or, they might pick a behemoth to start with, but it'll be a Land Cruiser. There's almost as many aftermarket parts available for those as for Wranglers.But it doesn't change the fact that anyone with the $60-100k investment into customizations is going to be smart enough to look for the right platform to build upon. They won't pick a behemoth like an Expedition (or a Tahoe/ Suburban) to start with.
The Military HUMMER is equipped with a very well designed IRS as I recall
And yet the 3.73 IRS has a higher RAWR than any of the solid rear axles in the GM BOF SUVs