Originally posted by glfredrick
...if I can find a suitable tow vehicle - otherwise I have to drive it out - or take the stock Ex instead... I might put skinny's on it and reconnect the sway bars and drive it - who knows?
Catch ya...
Guy, you wouldn't have to put "skinny's" on your Ranger and swap tires once you arrive out there to wheel at Moab. It is nothing like what this eastern US wheeling is like. Moab slickrock is a misnomer - it got it's "slickrock" designation from the old west days when Conestoga wagons rode over it on their metal-rimmed wooden wheels. Yeah, they slipped on this stuff. Not rubber. Moab slickrock is like driving on 180-grit sandpaper - you will never encounter more traction even on a city street. That's why you see Moab photos of incredibly steep shenanigans such as this one of me hitting the Launch Pad on the Golden Spike trail:
I'm sure you'll agree that you'll never see someone doing that at Tellico

Warning: just one day of wheeling on this stuff is absolutely addictive.
What I am saying is that IMO for Moab, a good AT tire is probably
better than a Swamper or mud tire - you won't encounter a need to claw through mud or gumbo for traction, and as a matter of fact, the more tread you can put on the ground the better, and a good AT tire like a BFG or etc will provide that. Don't misunderstand - Moab is still offroad with sharp rocks and you need good sidewalls that won't rip out on you, but as long as you have that, the more rubber on the ground, the better. You will not be encountering the traction issues we face out east - it is a
totally different wheeling experience out west.
What that means is that you could dump whatever swamper or bogger or MT tires you have on your Ranger that you don't want to suffer through on a 4,000 mile roundtrip, and instead install a set of very streetable AT tires to make the trip and do fabulously on the trail when you arrive. If you don't have good AT's with you, swap tires with one of your wheeling buddies for the week.