![]() 01/16/2016 at 20:39 • Filed to: Bro | ![]() | ![]() |
my inner redneck.
Don't know why I find it so attractive. But this is about the best looking lifted 07 F150 I think I've ever seen.
![]() 01/16/2016 at 20:51 |
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Your name used to be White Trash Steve. I’m surprised you have any redneck that’s inner, not outer.
![]() 01/16/2016 at 20:51 |
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I see cam phasers and coil packs when I spot that generation F-150.
![]() 01/16/2016 at 20:52 |
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If it was really redneck, wouldn’t it need to be a diesel F250 that never went offroad?
![]() 01/16/2016 at 21:09 |
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I need a dually.
![]() 01/16/2016 at 21:30 |
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That's nasty!!!!
![]() 01/16/2016 at 21:53 |
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That is very much anti-redneck.
![]() 01/16/2016 at 22:30 |
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I'm just wondering do people normally upgrade their brakes after they put bigger wheels/lift kit on?
![]() 01/16/2016 at 22:36 |
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You're getting redneck and poseur confused. They run a very close parallel.
![]() 01/16/2016 at 22:37 |
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No, no they do not. At least from what I've seen.
![]() 01/17/2016 at 01:08 |
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They should but often don't.
![]() 01/17/2016 at 12:35 |
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You haven’t seen diesel F250s in Georgia that don’t go offroad.
They are generally lifted stupidly, have AT tires that are too large, and have Browning Buckmarks plastered all over the back, and most of the time have RealTree camo everywhere.
![]() 01/17/2016 at 12:40 |
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No, I’m not. The diesel trucks I see down here in Georgia are a hybrid between lifted brodozer, and enough camo to actually stand out against asphalt or concrete. (Brodozers don’t generally have camo, rather they have chrome)
And they have enough Browning Buckmarks stuck on the rear window to make you wonder if they even hunt deer...
![]() 01/17/2016 at 13:20 |
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I guess it's a vinn diagram.
![]() 01/17/2016 at 14:04 |
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I’ve lived in 3 Southeastern states and Pennsyltucky in the last 5 years, so I’ve seen plenty of what you are talking about, but that still isn’t redneck. That is bro-country. Redneck Yacht Club is redneck.
![]() 01/17/2016 at 15:16 |
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Probably.
![]() 01/17/2016 at 15:17 |
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The worst offenders have Alabama tags on them, at least in Atlanta metro.
![]() 01/17/2016 at 15:33 |
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Yep, that’s where I’m from. I know guys that clean their truck every day. I haven’t cleaned mine in over a year.
![]() 01/17/2016 at 15:36 |
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Yeah, same here. Also, I find it more of a thing to say “and mine has over 300K miles on the odometer” as opposed to all the “upgrades” the brodozers have.
![]() 01/17/2016 at 15:42 |
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Mine is lifted and if it stayed clean, might come off as bro’d. But it’s never clean, because I’d rather it look like I have fun.
![]() 01/17/2016 at 16:38 |
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I just have slightly oversized tires that are AT and load range E. Still factory 16 inch wheels.
And no tune. Until I need the transmission rebuilt and then I’ll upgrade the transmission first.
![]() 01/17/2016 at 17:02 |
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That’s smart. The Allison is perfectly reliable behind a stock engine, but the second it’s behind a tuned engine is the second it begins to fail.
![]() 01/17/2016 at 17:11 |
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And since it’s only an LLY with 520ft-lbf, that could be another 300,000 miles.
![]() 01/27/2016 at 14:03 |
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Randomly saw this slightly older post. The lift kit shouldn’t do much to effect the vehicles ability to stop, so just a lift? no reason. Especially if it’s a spacer lift. Suspension lift - you’ll probably want to but not because of the lift because of everything else.
Bigger wheels, just do the brakes. They add weight. People don’t normally because they’re stupid.
Bigger Tires, depends. IF you go from a 26 inch tire to a 36 inch tire, yes upgrade your brakes lol. If you go up about 2 inches it probably won’t impact anything.
All from a guy who owns a 2" Spacer lifted 3 tire size up Jeep Commander who did not upgrade his brakes. There was no need with our setup.