dgoodwin10
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2014
- Location
- Birmingham, AL
This will be my first time posting here, but I've been a casual lurker for a while and decided it was time to contribute. I first met some of you guys at the ECORS race in Auburn back in 2011 when I worked recovery and had the unfortunate privilege watching Rob's buggy burn to the ground. My only real tie to North Carolina is my wife being from Gastonia. Figured some of you might enjoy this build, so here goes.
Cliff notes on me: Always been interested in off roading and tinkering in general, but didn't have any friends seriously into wheeling until I met some guys in college (fall of 2010) and it all went downhill from there. I’ve got a long way to go to ever claim to be an actual fabricator or mechanic, but I want to get there. I’m a firm believer all the good tech still lives in the forums and not in the dumpster fire that is FB/IG/etc.
After years of riding shotgun I decided to sell off several project Seadoos (I used to flip 90's 2 strokes in college and had a few sitting around) and bought what I could afford to get out in the woods - a 2004 Rhino. This entire build has been done on a shoestring budget and in my carport as I don't have a shop yet.
This was the day I brought it home. It has a +6 HCR LT kit, 2.0 Kings, 686cc stroker motor, and a pile of other stuff. It was a solid foundation to start out, but had a lot of hard miles on it and the PO wasn't the best mechanic. The first trip out was to Top Trails in Talladega and the thing did remarkably well, walking up everything I pointed it at. The trip went great until I clipped a stump at speed and broke my left wrist, leaving me in a cast from my knuckles to my shoulder for 12 weeks and only kinda able to work on small projects. Power steering, new radiator and electric fan, new exhaust, radio, added lighting, water temp and fuel gauge were all added.
The work space:
Once I was back to wheeling again a smoking deal on a set of 29" Bighorns came up, so off came the 26s.
The larger tires made a dramatic difference in capability but my 35hp needed a .5mm primary clutch shim to gain back some of the lost bottom end. I wheeled it like this relatively unchanged for almost 2 years, having a few issues (some self inflicted stupidity), which were mostly axle related. Either my (lack of) driving ability or the 29s stressed these axles to the point of being able to break almost on command (to the tune of $250 per shaft). I ride with mostly RZR 1000s and, believe it or not, this Rhino has made just about every obstacle they have and done it with relative ease... when the axles hold.
Morris Mountain
Boat Ramp at Chocco
Mulberry Creek in Plantersville, AL (rock crawlers don't swim)
Copperhead at MMORV
And no, I didn't make it up Boat Ramp . The last picture of me pulling cable was 15 mins into a ride and another broken axle, which almost lead to me selling this rig in December of 2019.
And since that'd be a terrible place to end a build thread, stay tuned for phase 2.
Cliff notes on me: Always been interested in off roading and tinkering in general, but didn't have any friends seriously into wheeling until I met some guys in college (fall of 2010) and it all went downhill from there. I’ve got a long way to go to ever claim to be an actual fabricator or mechanic, but I want to get there. I’m a firm believer all the good tech still lives in the forums and not in the dumpster fire that is FB/IG/etc.
After years of riding shotgun I decided to sell off several project Seadoos (I used to flip 90's 2 strokes in college and had a few sitting around) and bought what I could afford to get out in the woods - a 2004 Rhino. This entire build has been done on a shoestring budget and in my carport as I don't have a shop yet.
This was the day I brought it home. It has a +6 HCR LT kit, 2.0 Kings, 686cc stroker motor, and a pile of other stuff. It was a solid foundation to start out, but had a lot of hard miles on it and the PO wasn't the best mechanic. The first trip out was to Top Trails in Talladega and the thing did remarkably well, walking up everything I pointed it at. The trip went great until I clipped a stump at speed and broke my left wrist, leaving me in a cast from my knuckles to my shoulder for 12 weeks and only kinda able to work on small projects. Power steering, new radiator and electric fan, new exhaust, radio, added lighting, water temp and fuel gauge were all added.
The work space:
Once I was back to wheeling again a smoking deal on a set of 29" Bighorns came up, so off came the 26s.
The larger tires made a dramatic difference in capability but my 35hp needed a .5mm primary clutch shim to gain back some of the lost bottom end. I wheeled it like this relatively unchanged for almost 2 years, having a few issues (some self inflicted stupidity), which were mostly axle related. Either my (lack of) driving ability or the 29s stressed these axles to the point of being able to break almost on command (to the tune of $250 per shaft). I ride with mostly RZR 1000s and, believe it or not, this Rhino has made just about every obstacle they have and done it with relative ease... when the axles hold.
Morris Mountain
Boat Ramp at Chocco
Mulberry Creek in Plantersville, AL (rock crawlers don't swim)
Copperhead at MMORV
And no, I didn't make it up Boat Ramp . The last picture of me pulling cable was 15 mins into a ride and another broken axle, which almost lead to me selling this rig in December of 2019.
And since that'd be a terrible place to end a build thread, stay tuned for phase 2.