Useless Overland Gear/Mods

  Рет қаралды 134,300

Ozark Overland Adventures

Ozark Overland Adventures

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 789
@westwall6808
@westwall6808 Жыл бұрын
Some of your points are very valid. Where I live, the deserts of Nevada, water is life. You can NEVER have too much.
@mammothwagon
@mammothwagon 8 ай бұрын
Right. They live in Arkansas and pretend to be experts of overloading out West. Zero clue.
@danielfarmer4311
@danielfarmer4311 2 ай бұрын
Truth!!! I don’t get the rotopack. 2Gal jug for over a hundred dollars? Yeah, a 5 gal jug for 20 makes all the sense in the world. My opinion anyway
@tracydrum6733
@tracydrum6733 16 күн бұрын
@@westwall6808 you can definitely have too much water take as much as necessary
@SimoColes
@SimoColes Жыл бұрын
1. I'm Australian so there's no such thing as excess water 2. Again, Australian 3. Limb risers protect your windscreen and snorkel (but we barely run them) 4. A real cold air intake has a shroud to keep engine air out like my GTI 5. High lifts are excellent for different terrains when you don't get the choice on the ground you're jacking on
@mammothwagon
@mammothwagon 8 ай бұрын
How DARE you question an obvious EXPERT from ARKANSAS. /sarcasm
@kyle6703
@kyle6703 7 ай бұрын
What cold air intake model do you have and what vehicle do you have it installed on? Are there advantages that you notice with it? Thanks.
@AlmightyHilux
@AlmightyHilux 5 ай бұрын
When it comes to overlanding I feel like one must look to the Australians and South Africans to determine what's useful and what's frivolous.. places of varied terrain where breaking down could be life or death. That said, I haven't had a need for limb risers but calling them useless seems incorrect.
@dierkrieger
@dierkrieger 3 ай бұрын
I live In San Diego and it's similar to Australia , overlanders out here use pretty much the same gear as you guys. I couldn't imagine going out in the desert with minimal water.
@sgtrat87
@sgtrat87 Жыл бұрын
Limb risers aren’t to save your paint. They keep your windshield from being smacked by branches. At around $30, they’re cheap and if they prevent one broken windshield they’ve more than paid for themselves.
@ryoc2138
@ryoc2138 Жыл бұрын
My limb risers saved my windshield from a falling object. The limb risers got ripped out of their mounting points, but they stopped it a few inches from my windshield and hood. I was able to easily bolt them back into place.
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
If you're going fast enough for a limb to break the windshield then that's driver error and poor decision making. 😂😂
@Gregster3
@Gregster3 Жыл бұрын
Right?.. Going fast and furious? 😮
@nathanoleson8428
@nathanoleson8428 Жыл бұрын
@@OzarkOverlandAdventures i represent that statement
@jaypikachu6660
@jaypikachu6660 Жыл бұрын
The purpose of Limb risers are not protecting paint job or windshield, they help to push the branches away so you can able to see through faster, Camel Trophy Defender use them over 40 years ago, oh I forgot you haven’t born yet,😅😅😅😅😅
@Grissle209
@Grissle209 Жыл бұрын
Always thought “Limb Risers” were to protect the windshield?
@UncleJoeHikes
@UncleJoeHikes Жыл бұрын
Yeah I’ve never heard of using them to prevent pin-striping but they make sense for preventing windshield damage.
@JDS-Dalton
@JDS-Dalton Жыл бұрын
This video is actually the first time I've ever heard anyone say anything about them being used to prevent pinstriping. Only ever heard of them being used to protect the windshield.
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
If you're going fast enough for a limb to break the windshield then that's driver error and poor decision making. 😂😂
@UncleJoeHikes
@UncleJoeHikes Жыл бұрын
@@OzarkOverlandAdventures Well, it doesn’t take much! Let’s count the cracked ones at OE this year! I guess we’ll have to disagree on this one. 😉
@walj1295
@walj1295 Жыл бұрын
I use the “limb risers” to clear the view in dense and bushy trails.
@twva126
@twva126 Жыл бұрын
I grew up using a bumper jacket (high lift jack) and I love them. They are extremely versatile, if you know how to use it properly and safely. Other than my family, I don’t know anyone that knows how to actually use one. You are 100% right that they are useless if you don’t know what you’re doing, and also very dangerous.
@samsquanchoverland
@samsquanchoverland Жыл бұрын
i love mine also
@pacek9341
@pacek9341 Жыл бұрын
You can do more with a hi-lift than most people know how to do anyway, but you're on the money that they can bite ya if you don't learn how to work them. Actually had to shove my truck away from my wife when she was in an angry huff changing our truck from summer to winter tires on her own by her own choice. She changed her tune after she realized how close to dead she just had been.
@boster8368
@boster8368 10 ай бұрын
and there great for pulling power
@ttsupra2503
@ttsupra2503 Жыл бұрын
I do solo trips all over in my truck. I use a lifesaver jug for my water jug as it ensures whatever water i get from gas stations or water sources on the road is clean to drink but only carry a 20L with 20 extra per person. Limb risers if done right with cable can save light pods and windshields from stray branches and tree branches. High lift jack as a backup winch or secondary winch for crosshill situations. Possibly also needing to lift a wheel or axle direct using a tire strap, and doing a tire repair popping the bead. But you did admit that most dont know how to use them and those people shouldnt carry them and that i agree with. In the end, everyones needs are different so you have to go somewhere and see what might fix your problems or difficulties.
@IDAHOverland
@IDAHOverland 10 ай бұрын
Great content and no complaints here on anything you said or recommend. I admit I am one of those that have limb risers - but not for protection against pin stripes (that just seams stupid to me), but for windshield protection. I live in Idaho and spend a lot of time traveling the southern part which is mostly desert. The trees and bushes are low and very tight on a lot of the trails I frequent, where MANY branches (some 2"-3" thick) hit against your windshield (and Jeep windshields are notorious for damage). My limb risers help direct those branches over my windshield so I don't have to stop and cut the branches off the trees. Anything bigger and the saw(s) come out. I do have a High-lift (but I'm an old timer) that I've used several times, but never for changing a tire. I also carry 2 bottle jacks which are much more useful in 99% of needs.
@Steve-uy8kx
@Steve-uy8kx Жыл бұрын
This type of brutal honesty is very welcome.
@curtbrackenrich7883
@curtbrackenrich7883 Жыл бұрын
I speak for many when I say that I really appreciate your honesty and your ability to eat some humble pie. Good on ya.
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
Thanks.
@JacopoSkydweller
@JacopoSkydweller Жыл бұрын
Hard disagree on water, and water filtration. That may be enough for where you live, but in the Southwest, where water is generally not readily available in the mountains, having "excess" is a great idea. Running out of gas will be a PITA, running out of water will kill you. When it's hot, you're looking at more than a gallon per day per person, not to mention it being awful nice to be able to wash your hands, rinse your dishes, etc. I've had "plenty" of water twice, as in 10 gallons for 2 people for 3 days, and due to extenuating circumstances, ran out once and came pretty damn close the 2nd time. Now, do you need a 300$ water filtration system? No. I have a 70$ pump one, more designed for backpacking but it will do the job just fine given some time and elbow grease for a 5 or 10 gallon container.
@brocklastname6682
@brocklastname6682 Жыл бұрын
Agreed.
@graydonsharp5165
@graydonsharp5165 3 ай бұрын
@@brocklastname6682to many beautiful parts of the desert to only bring a couple gallons of water. Especially if you’re not planning on driving every day.
@tundraluv
@tundraluv Жыл бұрын
You said it correctly, your personal experience. Overlanding is such a meshing of other outdoor activities you can't put it in it's own little bucket. It is camping, it is offroading, it is roadtripping, it is survival, and so much more. The advice you're giving is great for someone exactly like you. I wonder how many people are exactly like you... Also, Huron-Manistee National Forest has trails so tight they can become impassable during certain times of the year. I do actually agree that limb risers wouldn't help much. It just goes to show you have a certain scope of experience that you're speaking to, and thats fine, but it should not be taken as gospel by your viewers.
@dwood2010
@dwood2010 Жыл бұрын
One point about water I would add is that it depends on where you are going. The Ozarks seem to have water everywhere.
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
Yes except for July and August. lol.
@RichGallant
@RichGallant Жыл бұрын
I think your comments on the Hi-lift are very valid, in that you need to know how to use it and maintain it. And the number of times you will use it is likely once a year at most, for very specific uses so it tends to be dead weight. For example, I have used mine with a tire lift kit to lift tires out of a collapsed wood culvert. But this is a case where a winch would not help as I had to go backward and get the frame off the ground. Yes, bottle jack would have worked, with a lot of digging to get it in place. And it was a long hard couple of hours as was. Excellent video and commentary
@Rubi747HVY
@Rubi747HVY Жыл бұрын
We have enough time doing this and now know the real world requirements for basic overlanding. I too find my solar panels to be useless in most situations. Love the part about the hi lift jack. You just saved me a few bucks. Keep up the great work.
@margyg
@margyg Жыл бұрын
If you run a fridge and are in warm climates a solar panel is a must if you r are not driving everyday enough to recharge. That is even with a second battery. We have dual battery systems in 3 vehicles. All three have their own fridge and they also all have a hood solar panel. I deem them a necessity based on actual use in the desert SW.
@BillyTpower
@BillyTpower Жыл бұрын
Hey Matt I believe the limb riser is designed to save your windshield. lol I live in western Canada and we have tight trails too
@jamesb3199
@jamesb3199 Жыл бұрын
We have since started carrying less water, 2 gal Rotopax and few Nalgene, sometimes a gallon jug depending on cooking. Filter is for backpacking and hunting out west. Our solar is full time mounted to tent, it pays no rent. We run fridge full time and rig sits more than runs even as a daily. High lift Jack, most folks don’t know how to use properly. I grew up using them…on the farm. Super handy, I don’t carry one and don’t think I would full time. On our 4Runner I think the factory Jack will still work We snorkeled lol Good video
@paachi
@paachi Жыл бұрын
Agree with everything you said, except the limb risers. I dont have limb risers on my vehicle but I have been in scenarios where having a limb riser would have been beneficial. Its not for saving paint. Its for tight trails and pushing the branches away from your windshield. No you dont need to go very fast to have an errant branch smack your windshield
@IndependenceOverland
@IndependenceOverland Жыл бұрын
I couldn’t agree with you more on the cold air intake and Hi Lift. Heavy and never got used, I took mine off years ago.
@derekheuring2984
@derekheuring2984 Ай бұрын
Some very good lessons here. I grew up in British Columbia, Canada where the conditions are very much different. Water was seldom a problem when offroading and the biggest issue was keeping warm and dry as I have been caught in a snow storm in August high up in the mountains. Now I live in Texas, don't worry so much about keeping warm and dry but have learned the importance of having lots of water on hand. One point: I completely disagree with your comment about cold air intakes, they do improve mileage and power and if you have a washable element they save money on replacing air filters in the long run. Their design helps insulate them from the heat coming off the motor and radiator as well as giving a less restrictive path for the airflow. I studied Chemistry in college and air when cooled by even as little as 10 degrees will give you noticeably more power and can support the combustion of more fuel allowing the engine to provide necessary power for any given load at a lower rpm which will also help reduce downshifts. Further, will you recover the $350 cost for the cold air intake? Eventually, yes.
@EmRilee
@EmRilee Жыл бұрын
My limb risers are only for supporting tarps when hail is expected - saves the hood and windshield.
@kindalike
@kindalike Жыл бұрын
Great tips. I don't usually buy anything from Harbor Fright but I like my bottle jack.
@robertlopez2278
@robertlopez2278 8 ай бұрын
You are absolutely right, you don't need all that extra weight. A high lift Jack. It's no good if you don't oil. It in grease it down all the time. There's always maintenance. You have to do as far as water is concerned. You are also right you need more fuel To get to places when overlanding. I carry a 5 gallon jug water That is all I need for cooking and drinking water as well as washing dishes. I really enjoy watching your videos Keep posting them on KZbin. They are very entertaining, especially when you are wearing your crazy hairdo And pushing limits on your jeep. Keep posting on KZbin, be safe out there.Take care and good luck In all you do.
@terrarecon
@terrarecon Жыл бұрын
19:50 Pro-Eagle off-road jack. Designed to raise lifted vehicles in awkward terrain. It has the stability for use in off-road conditions. A bottle jack is a good idea, uses less space, and costs less, but has a small bottom surface, and depending on the terrain could be useless. Not hate or rebuttal. We're here to help each other, which this video touches on some constructive feedback that needs to be said. Definitely appreciate you putting this video out there.
@Mazda2Matt
@Mazda2Matt Жыл бұрын
As someone who is just getting into this overland stuff I appreciate the info you share it makes A lot of sense that’s the main reason I subscribed to this channel plus y’all from the Ozarks as well so I’ll see close trails to me
@DarksideOffRoad
@DarksideOffRoad Жыл бұрын
You got me on the solar panels, air intake, and hilift lol. 😅 I do bring a bottle jack tho. Basically just keep the hilift for looks now.
@carlrobin1265
@carlrobin1265 6 ай бұрын
Great Info. I'm buying a Rubicon within a year, and watching your videos have help me a lot. But I disagree a little about your opinion of about water. Love your videos.
@WolfOverland
@WolfOverland Жыл бұрын
Every 6 months I pull everything out and if I never used it it gets thrown in the garage. You got me on the water. I had a huge 12 gallon tank and I went down to a little 4 gallon waterport for hand washing and cooking water. Enough for a quick Shower. Hotel every 3-4 days and body wash wipes is key. You got me on the hanging water filter thing. In the garage it went. 😂 Water is weight. McDonald’s is awesome for filling up water. Triple filtered. Very cold. I bring in a big bottle and fill up. Solar panel on the roof works good for the beach and and home to keep the fridge on 24/7. With redvision you don’t need it anyway. 😉 I had limb risers. Ok on a full size on my tundra here in the Appalachian mountains it is tight trails. Don’t have them in the jeep. Good for hanging wet clothes. 😂 100% agree on the cold air intake. Exsp on a jeep. Extra dumb points on a diesel that already has a intercooler 😂 Please do a review on the syclone pre filter!!! You will love it. I sold my high lift jack. Used one time. Saved my ass. But Bottle jacks 100% and soo heavy!!!
@cowelk
@cowelk Жыл бұрын
I just subscribed because I found you with Revere Overland yesterday. You really pushed some buttons with this video. It looks like most people agree with you on the solar panels but that is about it. I have used my hi-lift jack but I had to use it in conjunction with a bottle jack. I got a lift a few months ago and my Wrangler jack would not go high enough and neither would my bottle jack. So, the combination worked. I have since now have a block of wood to set my jack on that will work. But I will keep my cool looking hi-lift jack since it is not mounted on the hood.
@dysutopia4238
@dysutopia4238 Жыл бұрын
Helpful and needed. This is like a Mt Everest sherpa ranting about all his clients with money and their excessive obsession with gears. Like sherpas, we don't need no deadweights to get the ultimate experience.
@lukedejour
@lukedejour Жыл бұрын
The internet needs more of the these kinds of videos. The only item I disagree with is the hi-lift. One time I got stuck in a bog axle deep in remote trans Labrador highway. The only way out was to reverse winch using the hi-lift. I was alone and camping off the road, no cell phone and no other trucks to pull me out.
@333adventures3
@333adventures3 Жыл бұрын
Us old guys that grew up with bumper jacks know how dangerous lifting from the bumper can be. It best to lift it from under the frame or the axel.
@ricdonato4328
@ricdonato4328 Жыл бұрын
Love the cold air intake example and explanation. Double thumbs up! Being as those cold air intakes make more sound (14:18 woshy sound) some folks think their vehicle is more powerful. Heck, if sound produced more power my wife would be the CEO of the universe. As for the hi-lift jack, we thought it might be needed for recovery, well it came in handy a few times for pulling fence posts out of the ground; bada-boom. It now sits in the basement.
@Sasquatchflow
@Sasquatchflow Жыл бұрын
I’m not a big water drinker myself and never really realized how long I can actually go without drinking it until I started watching vids like this lol
@scottsnyder8691
@scottsnyder8691 Жыл бұрын
We were camped at Alta Lakes in CO a couple summers ago and we did actually use the lifestraw bag and it worked great. We were running low on water and it was nice to have because a run to the store would have been a hassle. I also like it because it stores easily and you never know when you might need to treat water in an emergency. I think I paid $100 for the 3 gallon bag.
@elpatudo3670
@elpatudo3670 Жыл бұрын
​@WTFover714 you don't get it..... Obviously.
@toddshook1765
@toddshook1765 Жыл бұрын
Great info. Some of the same things heard from other overlanders. Make it simple. Only thing as you said if base camping for a while is solar panels. I just need enough battery power for my CPAP and wife’s CPAP. Thanks for explaining your take.
@SteveB88
@SteveB88 Жыл бұрын
I like seeing videos like this because it shows you what you really don’t need. all of us that like to Overland see videos and pictures of all this really neat cool expensive gear that we think we need and it really ends up being a huge waste of money. The type of equipment you need really depends on the type of Overlanding you do..
@bloodyduck
@bloodyduck Жыл бұрын
I agree with Brett on limb risers. I have them, they do work. Saved my windshield a few times on some trails. Thanks for your opinion. I agree with the water section.
@boster8368
@boster8368 10 ай бұрын
Gorilla Glass windshield works too
@Draevon68
@Draevon68 Жыл бұрын
Useful tips that will save me some money. As far as limb risers saving your windshield, any branch big enough to break a windshield isn't going to be stopped by a little limb riser. But, by all means, use them if it gives you peace of mind.
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
Facts!!!
@umustbbornagainActs2-38
@umustbbornagainActs2-38 Жыл бұрын
The moment you said hi lift i instantly thought bottle jack! Before today I've never even heard of limb risers. Still learning..
@JChurchua
@JChurchua Жыл бұрын
Pretty good video. I grabbed a hilift jack to strap the tire and jack up there. Also, it is a "poor mans winch" electric winches are the bees knees but these work just fine too. I dont disgree with any of it though, i know mine is mostly decoration! 😊
@kneepayne
@kneepayne Жыл бұрын
I have the same 5-gallon blue jug that was on the far screen-right. I used that alone for a 2-week trip for two of us and still had some water left over. On a weekend family trip of four of us (dishes, brushing teeth, cooking) we used 2-3 gallons at the most. I have a small hiking water filter tucked away, but have yet to need it (except for actually hiking). On a couple of occasions I've used my solar panels when its a family trip and we are settling in one location (base camp) for multiple days. But like for my recent photography trip, we were always on the move and the Jackery continuously charged from the truck.
@benjaminjonholman
@benjaminjonholman Жыл бұрын
My favorite thing is seeing the high-lift Jack's mounted on trucks with factory bumpers and no rock sliders. So it has no method of lifting it or pulling it as a winch.
@Mlpojnnb1234
@Mlpojnnb1234 3 ай бұрын
@benjaminjonholman Lots of fake overlanders in Colorado. They take a stock truck and burger it out with lights and lifts and it has small street tires. 🤣
@brunnie
@brunnie Жыл бұрын
I agree with you. We all tend to think of "worst case" and "we need this" sets in, so we buy things without thinking it through. I have several things in my garage that I just do not need nor have I used them. They do make great dust catchers though. LOL Thanks for the video and until next time... Travel safe.
@jeepjku8083
@jeepjku8083 Жыл бұрын
The badge of honor trial in Ocala FL would like you to hold its beer and watch this in regard to tight trails and pinstripes.
@sectorresearch3941
@sectorresearch3941 Жыл бұрын
I was ganna say, Florida has some very tight trails, a lot of people just don’t know about them.
@helamanrivera6321
@helamanrivera6321 Жыл бұрын
Good video. Sometimes I use my hi lift jack with a lift mate in order to place a traction board right under the tire. It's a lifesaver when my tires just won't bite onto the boards
@robsterTN
@robsterTN Жыл бұрын
Spot on with the cold-air intake. I’m glad someone else said it.
@williamsisk2897
@williamsisk2897 Жыл бұрын
Cold air intake is for street rods. For going on the trail, a K&N replacement filter is a better option. When you get home from the dusty roads, you can place the filter in a tub of warm water and swish it around, rinse with running water, and dry.
@kevinsiggins623
@kevinsiggins623 Жыл бұрын
I agree, even on street cars most people aren't getting any benefit from them though. Unless you've done enough modifications that your air intake is a limiting factor they have little to no effect, yet every kid with a stock Honda thinks a cold air intake will make their car fast.
@scottyh72
@scottyh72 Жыл бұрын
K&N have been proven to let more dirt into the engine. Sure they flow more air. How do you think they do this?
@ky0611
@ky0611 Жыл бұрын
As someone who worked on cars, but new to offroading a bottle jack always made more sense to me than a hi lift jack
@brandontuelle4267
@brandontuelle4267 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for doing this video. Just bought my Jeep and yes everything you said makes sense. Especially about looking cool in the Jeep community. It has definitely made me think twice about future purchases.
@charleshunziker359
@charleshunziker359 Жыл бұрын
Great video! I agreed with everything. I do carry a Grayl filter just for hiking. That way I can carry one bottle of water and refill as needed along the trail. I carried a high lift on the brush guard of my 91 Explore back in the day. NEVER used it lol
@waker1776
@waker1776 Жыл бұрын
yup
@spikex41
@spikex41 Жыл бұрын
My favourite thing to do for showers is swing by a town pool, have a swim and shower. Especially nice in the winter seasons. Also the only thing I’ve used my high lift jack for was to bend my ATV rack back when I rolled the bike lol
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
I showered at a public shower just the other day. They are wonderful!
@joeylujan6293
@joeylujan6293 Жыл бұрын
Big fan of your channel. After watching your video I went on a hike thinking I always bring too much water... Almost ran out of water and that could've been disastrous. Also didn't bring my in-reach mini and came across a injured hiker that could've used SOS... Lesson learned, better to be safe than sorry. I always harp on my wife about bringing to much crap but after that experience we'll always be over-prepared.
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
My points on water do not apply to hiking. 😂
@joeylujan6293
@joeylujan6293 Жыл бұрын
@@OzarkOverlandAdventures not specifically and I know most of your local runs have water, my comment wasn't to knock your video, as I mentioned I'm a fan of your channel. Any time we adventure, we should be over-prepared just in case shit hits the fan. I hate carrying extra crap that we ended up bringing back and probably 98 times out of 100 we'll never need it. I'll never be without again.
@Utah_Mike
@Utah_Mike Жыл бұрын
Along with the bottle Jack I carry +/- 12” lengths of 2x4’s to built platforms. Great list!
@lexwernig6939
@lexwernig6939 Жыл бұрын
My only differing thoughts are on "cold air" intakes. They do work, but only marginally and at higher RPMs. At most +10HP in certain special conditions. Company and independent dynos show this too beyond just theoretical fluid mechanics. Stock intakes are designed to be at the best possible minimum standard at normal operating conditions (on roads at 1-3RPM) for as cheap as possible. At higher RPM (3-5) they are slightly restrictive, its the nature of fluid mechanics in tubes especially with filters. Larger intakes take up more space, cost more, are louder which some people dont like, and have little benefit to the average consumer driving normally. That's why they aren't stock. The "dream" performance combo would be a large tube snorkle (real cold air) feeding down into an enclosed cold air intake to maximize filtered flow even in high RPM.
@JDCheng
@JDCheng Жыл бұрын
I'd also point out that the temps for a "cold air intake" only become ambient when the vehicle is moving at a moderate to significant (highway) speed, and not so much when wheeling down a trail. I mean, if you're gunning down a trail fast enough to flow air through your grille to make the underhood temps like outside air, then that's a trail for Baja racing, rather than typical "offroading".
@gyorgyplesovszki
@gyorgyplesovszki Жыл бұрын
I couldn't agree with you more on the cold air intake.... I have a Ford Ranger that I put one on.... I had no acceleration after the truck warmed up.... I tried figuring out the problem and realized my so-called cold air intake tube was at 285 degrees..... switched it back to factory truck runs fine.
@darrellmendiola3495
@darrellmendiola3495 Жыл бұрын
Hey Matt. I'm still fairly new. The only thing I have that you mentioned is water filtration. I have a 3 stage water filtration system. We bring a 7 gallon water jug and just get water from the river. But, I take my wife with me, and she and I love showers lol. I have a shower tent and hot water heater. Love your videos bro
@thescottishhammer7570
@thescottishhammer7570 Жыл бұрын
Highlift jacks are great for stretching fence or pulling fence posts, and that's it. Definitely a newbie piece of equipment.
@EmerysZR2Duramax
@EmerysZR2Duramax 9 ай бұрын
I agree with you on a lot of the items. Especially solar panels! They take up space and really need perfect sun conditions to be worth it. Hell, even here in Florida, you won’t get much solar charge unless there are no clouds.
@IsolationOverland
@IsolationOverland Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this. As someone fairly new to overlanding you brought up great points that I hadn't even thought of. I appreciate what you do!
@Eduardo_Espinoza
@Eduardo_Espinoza Жыл бұрын
Just don't get stuck in the desert
@dennislee505
@dennislee505 Жыл бұрын
Grandpa taught me to use a Farm Jack (Hi-Lift) as a young boy on the farm. I would never consider using it as a come along. I can change a tire with mine. I do agree they are decorations for most people they are hey look at me decorations. Thought you made all good points. Great tips, especially the excess water.
@freedomrevival1375
@freedomrevival1375 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for pointing out these blind spots Matt! Great work!
@kilswitch4336
@kilswitch4336 Жыл бұрын
Just to be clear on the cold air intake, the computer doesnt limit the air coming in... It uses that information to properly adjust the fuel pulse to the injectors to achieve the closest F/A ratio to the given conditions. That being said, you are correct that they are not worth the upgrade and most times not installed in an area that makes them beneficial. Outside that, love the channel and value your opinions as you speak from experience and not just popular opinion 👌
@JessDeeganIIPhD
@JessDeeganIIPhD Жыл бұрын
Agree about everything, except the high-lift. I do agree with many of your statements about the hi-lift, but I have also used it many times when other items were not available. As you say, a good tool in the correct hands.
@jinoh7418
@jinoh7418 Жыл бұрын
Most overlanders are about fashion accessories on their rig and social media likes.
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
That’s not true at all. 🤦🏼‍♂️
@Koritan
@Koritan Жыл бұрын
I agree with a lot of that! Hi Lift jack especially!! Never got one and never seen a friend use one! I did limb risers on my old TJ, but have not gone with them for my JL. Snorkel I did before and I am on the fence.. but definitely not doing a "cold air" intake... honest and truth sir.. good job
@wardo2503
@wardo2503 Жыл бұрын
High lift jack can serve as a handy recovery tool when buried in the mud and you need to brake the suction and get some traction boards under the tires but not something i would remember for maintenance or to carry for every Overland adventure and can be vary dangerous if used improperly
@matthewtaylor1039
@matthewtaylor1039 Жыл бұрын
Great video and great knowledge. While someone’s feelings were probably hurt I couldn’t agree more with your recommendations. You’ll definitely save some folks some money if they pay attention.
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@ec-norsemanzero-drake7031
@ec-norsemanzero-drake7031 Жыл бұрын
Well done. Especially the hilift, and the hot air intake. Skills and research a much.
@gods_country_overland
@gods_country_overland Жыл бұрын
Good stuff. Its so easy to overthink overlanding gear or do what looks cool. Great video
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@sethpoeski2954
@sethpoeski2954 Жыл бұрын
Honestly, I agree with every single one of these. We tend to buy stuff because we think we MAY need it, but never truly evaluate scenarios we actually end up in vs what we've bought. I'm learning to slim my pack out down quite a bit!
@PowerMcWagonFace
@PowerMcWagonFace Жыл бұрын
A few extra gallons of water to ensure your campfires are completely out is wise and responsible.
@gladiatoroverland
@gladiatoroverland Жыл бұрын
A good primer for water without showering is 1 gallon per person every 24/hr period. Has worked for us for years. We carry 15gallons even with 2 dogs and easily can make it 7-10days as long as we are cognizant of our water usage.
@genuinecve
@genuinecve Жыл бұрын
Hey wooshey sounds are so important, they're almost as important as playing cards in our spokes!
@paulbreault4513
@paulbreault4513 4 ай бұрын
Carrying water is for emergency purposes, not everyday use. What happens if you’re in Death Valley 100 miles down a trail and you break down. You’re going to need that water.
@jkuoverland8507
@jkuoverland8507 Жыл бұрын
I agree with your comments based on your style of over landing, but! For me I go remote and have back ups to a back up. I routinely return to a place, or home with extra of everything, but I carry more than I need not for me, but for someone else that my be in a unfavorable situation. To be transparent, I over land with a M103 looking like trailer and no rear seats in my Jeep, so I have the space. Good advice and video, hard to encompass every style in one video.
@novascotiaurbanexploration3021
@novascotiaurbanexploration3021 Жыл бұрын
Ive had limb risers on anything ive taken in the woods here in eastern canada, and definitely glad i had them on a few occasions
@1995Kakashi
@1995Kakashi Жыл бұрын
Overall, pretty much agree with all these. I haven't used a High-lift before but I can see it's uses for more technical trails/rock crawling instances but not so much for overlanding. For limb risers, I use them more for protecting the windshield from getting bashed rather than pinstripes. Battle scars is fine but I'd rather not smack a thick branch. Plus making your own limb risers costs like 30 bucks including all the buckles. Mine have definitely gave me more peace of mind when driving through over grown trees (northern California). I've also gone through the ringer with finding solutions to fit my needs when on the trail and its always a learning process. Last winter I bought a bluetti thinking it would be a good solution for the fridge but it runs out of power pretty quick unless we're driving. If I could go back, I would have used that money to hook up a dual battery setup. More passive and more suited for my needs. Always learning....
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
If you're going fast enough for a limb to break the windshield then that's driver error and poor decision making. 😂😂
@1995Kakashi
@1995Kakashi Жыл бұрын
@@OzarkOverlandAdventures I mean even at slow speeds a thick branch against the windshield doesn't seem like a good time... guess I'm a bad drive for making DIY limb risers 😔
@waker1776
@waker1776 Жыл бұрын
@@1995Kakashi chainsaw is good to have onboard.
@philosophic6208
@philosophic6208 Жыл бұрын
Amen to that. I'm in eastern woodlands and won't leave home without it.@@waker1776
@bootsish
@bootsish Жыл бұрын
Congrats on the channel’s success Matt. It’s great to see how many patrons’ names follow mine on the scroll in such a short time. All very sound advice on this video. My water situation is a bit different in my JLU since I trailer a duel sport motorcycle. I’ll base camp for a couple days and explore the area on the bike, then load up and head to another epic campsite like on the Mulberry River last weekend ;-). A real, although quick shower every evening is a must but my 6 gallon Igloo Jerry can and CampLux shower is perfect and will easily last 8 or 9 days or until the next fuel stop. A loaded 392 pulling a trailer equals MANY fuel and water stops. I use a Dometic water can for cooking and clean up and an empty LifeSaver Jerry can for emergencies but, like you, may be getting rid of it soon because it’s never had a drop of water in it. Love the videos and hope to see you in the Ozarks sometime!
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much!!
@brsnow225
@brsnow225 Жыл бұрын
I’ll pose you a question on snorkels…. Using my gladiator rubicon for reference…max water crossing per manual is ~33”, top of tire……but radiator fan motor is middle of grill, and alternator is even lower than that. Even the stock intake is way above at the bottom of the hood line. I get the snorkel from the sense of getting out into cool air from the engine bay and dust from wheels, but you’re loosing air intake performance because of the length of air travel, as well as reducing airflow every time the air makes a 90 turn, you loose a ton of flow
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
The alternator is on top of the engine on the 3.6L engine. Don't cross if you fan is running (mine rarely does off road). You're not losing performance with the snorkel. Even if length of air travel was an issue the opening of the snorkel increases the volume of air compared to the stock intake.
@JimmyDevere
@JimmyDevere 3 ай бұрын
A hi lift saved my bacon when no other recovery tool would. Stuck in sandy water river. Every shovel the sand would rush back in with the current. No way to get a bottle, sissor jack under the vehicle in the water. Had a winch facing into the river, nothing to winch to. Used the hi lift with their wheel attachment tool and got max tracks under the front tires. 4 hour recovery but only because of the hi lift. On my Jeep, I don't have a winch but I carry a hi lift, max tracks and some rigging and ground spikes to recover my self a foot or so, just enough to get out of a bad situation.
@IaMCdN1
@IaMCdN1 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Matt! After $20k of gear and mods I can proudly say I haven’t purchased one of these things.
@electricstartclint
@electricstartclint Жыл бұрын
Same! Haha
@mikegz83
@mikegz83 Жыл бұрын
Haha you started off with “I’m going to hurt some y’all’s feelings” bwahaha… good vid, noted especially on the hi lift Jack and other things you mentioned. 👌🏼🍻💯
@Wallymakesstuff
@Wallymakesstuff Жыл бұрын
I agree with everything but the high lift. I never used mine until recently when I got so stuck in mud that I had to use it to get the traction boards under the rear tires to get out (high lift sitting on top of a log that was in a trench we dug, so the log wouldn’t sink). Winch wouldn’t have worked, nothing to winch on to. But yeah they’re heavy as hell and I’ve had the base pin snap and kick it out at my shin once …. So you have to be careful.
@TheCreateOutdoors
@TheCreateOutdoors Жыл бұрын
I 100% agree with the solar panels. I think they are great for things like van life (which do you really even need it then?), but like you said, you can charge on the go.
@proyectozonda
@proyectozonda Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the advise👏👏agree with most of them based on my limited experience so far, maybe disagree with the limb raisers which I was planning to install basically to protect the windshield
@DanWeinel
@DanWeinel Жыл бұрын
OMG, the Cold Air Intake!! Thank you for saying it! I've been telling people for years that CAIs are pointless, if anything more harmful. I also dont like the Hi-lift. I almost dropped a truck on my younger brother one time with one. The one time I actually used it off-road was to bend a leaf spring back.
@matthew.tamasco
@matthew.tamasco Жыл бұрын
Love my Hi-Lift jack on the hood of my Jeep! Works on high centers and as a come-along.
@robertswanson4505
@robertswanson4505 19 күн бұрын
Appreciate the video. Ya our trails are very tight out here on NC PA private club property. Limb risers help out a lot. But in the public parks, na, not needed. I'm in the market for one of those lifesaver cans if you want to sell 😂
@jessemorgan6422
@jessemorgan6422 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your input on the water filtration containers and straws . I always wanted one because I was a fan of the survival shows. I'm only a wkend warrior, I don't even need one.
@R.Booster
@R.Booster 3 ай бұрын
Great video. I would disagree only on the hi lift. I have used mine plenty of times for recovery. And yes I have a winch haha.
@tomhorner9918
@tomhorner9918 Жыл бұрын
Had a couple of the things you mentioned (operative word had) and agree they were unused and therefore removed from the Jeep. My recommendation is, when the adventure is over, take inventory, what did you use, what didn't and won't get used, keep the former and reduce weight and volume be getting rid of the later. Just my 2 cents.
@TheArtemis1117
@TheArtemis1117 Жыл бұрын
I can see your issues with the hi-lift jack. Knowing how to, and having used them. I do like them. I never considered a bottle jack to be honest. But yeah, those take up way less space, and are less cumbersome. I'll have to give it a try, even if I decide to keep the high-lift in the jeep. Doesn't hurt to have a backup, or even use the bottle jack in the garage if I have to. I'm sold.
@Flyingpigadventures
@Flyingpigadventures Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂 you Crack me up, you hit the nail on the head with cold air intake, I've been saying that for the last 20 years.THEY DO NOTHING. YOU GOTTA THINK THIS THRU. If you get that on a t-shirt I'll buy one lol 😂😂😂 Great job Matt
@jnork5005
@jnork5005 Жыл бұрын
Just wanted to weigh in on the "cold air intake" . I agree they have no place in off-roading or overlanding because of the dusty environment and poor filtration. A true "cold air intake" is sealed from the engine bay and draws colder denser air at a higher volume into the engine. The air is metered by a MAF sensor with an IAT sensor that's built into it nowadays. Your ECU uses a variety of different multipliers based off intake air temp, manifold pressure, and air volume to achieve the perfect A/F ratio at any given time. So if your cold air intake with a high flow filter is efficient enough to allow more air, which is colder, it will have to adjust the mixture as you mentioned in the video to achieve the commanded AF ratio parameters in the ECU. If all you're pulling in is hot air at a lower volume because of a restricted filter the ECU will require less fuel to achieve the desired AF ratio thus making less HP. Colder air at a higher volume will require more fuel for a complete burn which will give you more HP. I'm not willing to sacrifice my filtration system for 5-10HP so in a off-road application it's still useless unless you have a mall crawler or a sports car.
@JamesMcGillis
@JamesMcGillis Жыл бұрын
Aftermarket cold air intakes are illegal in California. The best legal thing you can do is install a 21:41 high-flow air filter media. A cat-back (or filter-back for diesel) exhaust system is also still legal. Even an oil catch can or a non-stock intercooler are technically illegal. Essentially, anything that modifies the induction or exhaust cycle is illegal.
@notacreativehandle
@notacreativehandle 11 ай бұрын
@@JamesMcGillis That is an incorrect generalization. Aftermarket parts are LIMITED, but not completely legal. Certain manufacturers make aftermarket components for intakes and exhausts that are CARB legal [California Air Resources Board].
@notacreativehandle
@notacreativehandle 11 ай бұрын
That’s interesting because there is enough evidence that aftermarket cold air intakes do just fine in off-road applications.
@adkcampadventures
@adkcampadventures Жыл бұрын
Agree on water. I use to fill those 7 gallon jugs and come home with at least 4 gallons. Switched to midnight forest 2 gallon and couldn’t be happier
@Casey250
@Casey250 Жыл бұрын
Glad to not see a supercharged hemi on this list. Everyone keeps telling me its useless for overlanding but now i feel redeemed.
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
@RevereOverland
@RevereOverland Жыл бұрын
A Jeep should have been top of the list 😉
@AZTLANSOLDIER13
@AZTLANSOLDIER13 Жыл бұрын
When I watch Ozark overland and Trail Recon collaboration videos, i like to imagine I'm watching Don Knotts and John Ritter are out overlanding together 😅
@OzarkOverlandAdventures
@OzarkOverlandAdventures Жыл бұрын
New TR/OOA videos coming soon. Lol.
@jeepinbanditrider
@jeepinbanditrider Жыл бұрын
Most of the "cold" air intakes also use some kind of oiled gauze filter element, like a K&N (garbage filters), which are horrible at keeping fine dirt/dust out of the engine. The factory style paper or fiber filter element is far better at filtering than the oiled gauze crap. My HiLift does a really good job at holding the rafters in my garage down. On top of most people not knowing how to use them, they don't maintain them worth a crap. A decent scissor jack is worth more than a hilift in most uses.
@barongaines3286
@barongaines3286 Жыл бұрын
You are about half right with the cold air intake. The biggest part you missing is when it comes to the tube. The factory intake has added chambers that create excess turbulence as the air is going to the engine, this reduces fuel efficiency. Despite the name a cold air intake, it doesn't mean you're getting cold air into the engine. They have less restrictive air filters and smooth bend tubing, giving you a higher air volume going time the engine and it has less turbulence. Now you add the factory CAI with the factory snorkel you might see a small increase on the dyno but you are more likely to see the only difference between trips to the gas pump. The only real way to get the most out of your CAI is with tuning the engine so that you make better use of the added air, you have to adjust that air to fuel ratio.
@gregoryblock9083
@gregoryblock9083 Жыл бұрын
Completely entertained by this one. Laughing throughout. Speaking truth to conventions. 😂 happy trails
Overlanding Gear That's Actually Worth the Money
22:05
Ozark Overland Adventures
Рет қаралды 163 М.
STOP Wasting Money on Overlanding Gear You Don't Need!
20:00
Automobros
Рет қаралды 172 М.
Увеличили моцареллу для @Lorenzo.bagnati
00:48
Кушать Хочу
Рет қаралды 8 МЛН
HELP!!!
00:46
Natan por Aí
Рет қаралды 76 МЛН
The Singing Challenge #joker #Harriet Quinn
00:35
佐助与鸣人
Рет қаралды 42 МЛН
Disrespect or Respect 💔❤️
00:27
Thiago Productions
Рет қаралды 42 МЛН
Worst 7 items/4wd mods to Take Travelling Australia
9:42
Always Touring
Рет қаралды 105 М.
Watch This BEFORE Buying a Used Jeep Gladiator JT!
22:32
Adventure Gear TV
Рет қаралды 44 М.
15 BIGGEST Mistakes Every Overlander Makes
21:43
TrailRecon
Рет қаралды 248 М.
Ollie Ollertons ultimate bug out vehicle build. Pinzgauer 6x6 campervan.
18:45
Bug out vehicles UK
Рет қаралды 205 М.
Overland JL Rubicon Build
23:14
Goldens Gone Wheelin'
Рет қаралды 46 М.
My ULTIMATE Amazon Overland Gear List
47:21
Justin B. McBride
Рет қаралды 26 М.
Why LOW Trucks Perform Better OFF-ROAD | Lexus' Secrets for GX550
13:54
Tinkerer's Adventure
Рет қаралды 484 М.
Budget VS. Expensive Overland Gear - Where To Spend and Where to Go Cheap
33:59
Overlanding/Camping Gear Guide - What's Working and What's Not
47:24
Ozark Overland Adventures
Рет қаралды 91 М.
The Best Camping Gear that has Changed our Overlanding Trips
27:04
Ozark Overland Adventures
Рет қаралды 607 М.
Увеличили моцареллу для @Lorenzo.bagnati
00:48
Кушать Хочу
Рет қаралды 8 МЛН