I hate modern off-roading culture. It's become more about bragging rights on how many thousands you shelled out for your lift kit than how much you actually enjoy the driving experience itself. Not everyone needs a $4500 lift kit on their truck or Jeep to cruise the access roads from a higher stance. I bet there's a correlation between Jeepers who shell out tons of unnecessary money for the Apple ecosystem and people who constantly complain about Rough Country for being too cheap.
I’ve put too many RC kits to count on Jeep’s and trucks from 1/2-1 ton models luckily I haven’t had to many negative experiences as a tech besides a forgotten bolt bag etc but the customer always seems satisfied about them. Don’t think you need to spend over $2000 for a kit with fox shocks or gold arms
It’s very simple. Every product has its customer bracket. You want a kit you can throw on that gives you the stance and some benefit when off-roading and NOT break the bank? Then you buy kits like rough country. If you want a kit that will give you SERIOUS off-roading capabilities then you buy coil overs and shock absorbers from companies like King, Fox, ADS, Dirt Logic ETC. After that you buy suspension components from companies like Camburg, Baja Kits, Total Chaos, BTF, ETC. I bought RC 3” lift struts with RC upper arms and the basic RC 2” lift rear shocks. I spent around $750 for all of it. The cheapest Long travel kit for my truck is made by Dirt King which is $6500 for just spindle, upper arm, lower arm and it doesn’t include shock absorbers and coil overs. Regardless if you buy king, fox, ADS Putting a bypasses in the front you are looking at around 2k for both. For coil overs you are looking around $1800 for both. So at the end of the day. NOT including fabrication and labor you are gonna spend around 13k for just the front end of my truck. That’s not including the rear end. In no way shape or form am I comparing RC to king travel and other kits made by custom fabrication companies like camburg, kibbetech etc. They do not make any suspension kits that can handle whoops and dips at high speed. What I’m saying is RC is a great alternative for those who don’t want to spend a massive amount in their vehicle. My personal experience with RC. I originally bought the lift struts and rear shocks. I didn’t replace the stock arms after installing the lift struts because I wasn’t thinking and immediately had problems with my stock arm hitting the frame because of the lift angle the struts put on the truck. I purchased the RC upper arms for my truck and it gave me the needed clearance and down travel the shocks were trying to achieve. I’m an avid off-roader and have built prerunners in SoCal since highschool. Going to the desert a lot is what me and my friends have done since we were kids. As soon as the kit was on, the desert was the first destination. Lift struts and gas shocks are not made to tear up whoops and other terrain at high speeds. I have absolutely railed my truck in the desert hoping something doesn’t break. I have bottomed out countless times and have had the front shocks at full droop pulling on the head seal over and over. I’ve since installed Limit straps from Kartek in the front to help save the suspension components from being pulled apart. The front struts after months of driving and off-roading I noticed sagged. I had them for 4 months and they sagged 2 inches. RC sent me a replacement set in a couple weeks after I sent out a request. Since the 2nd set the truck has not sagged after a couple trips to Lucern Valley, Ocotillo wells, Barstow and El Mirage lake bed. So far no leaking seals front or rear and no sagging.
This is a good one. Rough Country sure does get a bad rap ... maybe (still) because of issues they had in the 90's?! I dunno, but I have had their 4.5" Long arm system in my XJ since 2011 with no issues. Superflexy, stable on pavement... I thoroughly dig their stuff, and their Customer Service is second to none. Probably why I have MORE Rough Country stuff ... and now even more, now that we bought a Wrangler JL.
👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼Rough country for 3 years 52,000 miles on and off road great lift kit ! I got 5 inch on my 2018 ram 2500 HD with 37” and it will get after it in the mud for a heavy truck and does great on the road too !
I have a 2019 RAM Classic. I’m up in the Nevada desert, and I drive gravel and 4x4 every day. I just went from OEM to Rough Country 2” struts and the difference is night and day. Rough country is so much better than the OEM. I’m planning on installing the V2 shocks on the back. Some days I carry around 800 pounds on the back and my rear OEM shocks are worn out after only 40,000 miles and I have a lot of sag. Can I install the v2 shocks with improved coil springs? Do I need to add anything else? It’s my work truck, so it needs to last. I don’t need some fancy stuff that costs me thousands of $ since the truck pays for itself
@TrailBuiltOff-road i own a 2015 lifted Scion xB. After almost a year of driving lifted xB with my oem rear shocks. It has the ridiculous cavity of making clunk noise when I drive through bumps. So I looked to see if I can find that matches the same design that has top stud and bottom eyelet. So the 2005-2021 Toyota Tacoma N3 rear shocks that’s made for those truck lifted between 2.5”-5.5”. Since mine is 2.5” lift, these rough country N3 will be the perfect choice to reduce that annoying clunk noise. This will be worth spending money on this. 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Yes, some sag. But not all do. And I have heard of other manufacturers springs sag too. I have lifted around 10 jeeps with their suspension, and have had no noticeable sag.
@@jeffbennett8093 exactly people like me want to daily drive a vehicle(mine is a 4runner) I’m not hardcore off-roading just want a good lift and bigger tires, people think I should spend $4,000 on a lift to drive to fuckin work everyday?🤣 yeah ok
Trash..... shocks leaking after a month, spring sag. I took that crap off and spend the money on a teraflex long arm with 3.3 falcon shocks. Never looking back, tried to tell a friend it RC is crap but he got his long arm kit from them for his cherokee and we had to send it back 3 times from the welds being bad. Yes its a life time warranty but who wants to have their rig disabled every month.
@@StirFry-Tiger 🤣 I mean I see that, but RC isn’t all bad I had it on my RAM but it varies I guess, everyone who usually hates on it just hates it because the internet tells em to so it’s hard to determine who’s bullshitting and who’s not
@@StirFry-Tiger yeah man, I just don’t know why they get shit though lmao you pay for a $350-$1,200 lift depending on your vehicle but then people complain about quality lol, it’s really meant to daily drive with a lift on, not hardcore off-road😂 but I understand too where you are coming from I’d be pissed too if I had to send it back a few times
Rough country the #1 choice for the working man that works on his own truck.
I hate modern off-roading culture. It's become more about bragging rights on how many thousands you shelled out for your lift kit than how much you actually enjoy the driving experience itself. Not everyone needs a $4500 lift kit on their truck or Jeep to cruise the access roads from a higher stance. I bet there's a correlation between Jeepers who shell out tons of unnecessary money for the Apple ecosystem and people who constantly complain about Rough Country for being too cheap.
I would like to know, what are the differences in between the N3, M1 and V2 shocks?
I’ve put too many RC kits to count on Jeep’s and trucks from 1/2-1 ton models luckily I haven’t had to many negative experiences as a tech besides a forgotten bolt bag etc but the customer always seems satisfied about them. Don’t think you need to spend over $2000 for a kit with fox shocks or gold arms
Been using them since late 80s. First was a 4" lift on a dodge W250. I used to jump that truck without an issue! Been using ever since without issue.
It’s very simple. Every product has its customer bracket. You want a kit you can throw on that gives you the stance and some benefit when off-roading and NOT break the bank? Then you buy kits like rough country. If you want a kit that will give you SERIOUS off-roading capabilities then you buy coil overs and shock absorbers from companies like King, Fox, ADS, Dirt Logic ETC. After that you buy suspension components from companies like Camburg, Baja Kits, Total Chaos, BTF, ETC. I bought RC 3” lift struts with RC upper arms and the basic RC 2” lift rear shocks. I spent around $750 for all of it. The cheapest Long travel kit for my truck is made by Dirt King which is $6500 for just spindle, upper arm, lower arm and it doesn’t include shock absorbers and coil overs. Regardless if you buy king, fox, ADS Putting a bypasses in the front you are looking at around 2k for both. For coil overs you are looking around $1800 for both. So at the end of the day. NOT including fabrication and labor you are gonna spend around 13k for just the front end of my truck. That’s not including the rear end. In no way shape or form am I comparing RC to king travel and other kits made by custom fabrication companies like camburg, kibbetech etc. They do not make any suspension kits that can handle whoops and dips at high speed. What I’m saying is RC is a great alternative for those who don’t want to spend a massive amount in their vehicle.
My personal experience with RC.
I originally bought the lift struts and rear shocks. I didn’t replace the stock arms after installing the lift struts because I wasn’t thinking and immediately had problems with my stock arm hitting the frame because of the lift angle the struts put on the truck. I purchased the RC upper arms for my truck and it gave me the needed clearance and down travel the shocks were trying to achieve. I’m an avid off-roader and have built prerunners in SoCal since highschool. Going to the desert a lot is what me and my friends have done since we were kids. As soon as the kit was on, the desert was the first destination. Lift struts and gas shocks are not made to tear up whoops and other terrain at high speeds. I have absolutely railed my truck in the desert hoping something doesn’t break. I have bottomed out countless times and have had the front shocks at full droop pulling on the head seal over and over. I’ve since installed Limit straps from Kartek in the front to help save the suspension components from being pulled apart. The front struts after months of driving and off-roading I noticed sagged. I had them for 4 months and they sagged 2 inches. RC sent me a replacement set in a couple weeks after I sent out a request. Since the 2nd set the truck has not sagged after a couple trips to Lucern Valley, Ocotillo wells, Barstow and El Mirage lake bed. So far no leaking seals front or rear and no sagging.
This is a good one. Rough Country sure does get a bad rap ... maybe (still) because of issues they had in the 90's?! I dunno, but I have had their 4.5" Long arm system in my XJ since 2011 with no issues. Superflexy, stable on pavement... I thoroughly dig their stuff, and their Customer Service is second to none. Probably why I have MORE Rough Country stuff ... and now even more, now that we bought a Wrangler JL.
👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼Rough country for 3 years 52,000 miles on and off road great lift kit ! I got 5 inch on my 2018 ram 2500 HD with 37” and it will get after it in the mud for a heavy truck and does great on the road too !
Love my RC shocks have them on my Jeep JL and they have been solid since I bought them
Pretty smooth , not sure why peoples get so mad about the affordable price.
And where is it all made
Scheduled to get the RC 2.5” with coils and shocks this week. But now thinking I want the Zone 3”. Much difference? JL 2dr sport s
I have a 2019 RAM Classic. I’m up in the Nevada desert, and I drive gravel and 4x4 every day. I just went from OEM to Rough Country 2” struts and the difference is night and day. Rough country is so much better than the OEM. I’m planning on installing the V2 shocks on the back. Some days I carry around 800 pounds on the back and my rear OEM shocks are worn out after only 40,000 miles and I have a lot of sag. Can I install the v2 shocks with improved coil springs? Do I need to add anything else? It’s my work truck, so it needs to last. I don’t need some fancy stuff that costs me thousands of $ since the truck pays for itself
@TrailBuiltOff-road i own a 2015 lifted Scion xB. After almost a year of driving lifted xB with my oem rear shocks. It has the ridiculous cavity of making clunk noise when I drive through bumps.
So I looked to see if I can find that matches the same design that has top stud and bottom eyelet.
So the 2005-2021 Toyota Tacoma N3 rear shocks that’s made for those truck lifted between 2.5”-5.5”.
Since mine is 2.5” lift, these rough country N3 will be the perfect choice to reduce that annoying clunk noise.
This will be worth spending money on this. 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Lifted xb???
@@HyperionGamingTOPKEK u are correct 😎
I installed the 3" kit on my '99 XJ and I don't like the Harsh On Road ride..
So I've seen first hand the springs sag but never owned anything from them im sure some stuff is good 👍
Yes, some sag. But not all do. And I have heard of other manufacturers springs sag too. I have lifted around 10 jeeps with their suspension, and have had no noticeable sag.
Is it good suspension for f150 off-roading?
Absolutely!
I guess it comes down to do you drive a jeep 4x4 or do you 4x4 a jeep but wish you had a range rover
why is there only 7 comments??
I wonder that as well...
My m1 said made in China 😳
Dirt King
Buy once, cry once. You get what you pay for. Go carli for kits.
Most people don't need 5 thousand dollar plus suspension kits.
@@jeffbennett8093 exactly people like me want to daily drive a vehicle(mine is a 4runner) I’m not hardcore off-roading just want a good lift and bigger tires, people think I should spend $4,000 on a lift to drive to fuckin work everyday?🤣 yeah ok
Trash..... shocks leaking after a month, spring sag. I took that crap off and spend the money on a teraflex long arm with 3.3 falcon shocks. Never looking back, tried to tell a friend it RC is crap but he got his long arm kit from them for his cherokee and we had to send it back 3 times from the welds being bad. Yes its a life time warranty but who wants to have their rig disabled every month.
What did you do? Hit a pothole going 90?
@@keith1776 nope just a shitty product
@@StirFry-Tiger 🤣 I mean I see that, but RC isn’t all bad I had it on my RAM but it varies I guess, everyone who usually hates on it just hates it because the internet tells em to so it’s hard to determine who’s bullshitting and who’s not
@@keith1776 They have actually improved over the last few years because of the feed back from people. They aren't as bad as they used to be.
@@StirFry-Tiger yeah man, I just don’t know why they get shit though lmao you pay for a $350-$1,200 lift depending on your vehicle but then people complain about quality lol, it’s really meant to daily drive with a lift on, not hardcore off-road😂 but I understand too where you are coming from I’d be pissed too if I had to send it back a few times