I got the tires mounted and balanced, and got the front end aligned on Friday. The guy that did the alignment wasn't too wild about the aftermarket steering linkage, it requires a bit more work to adjust. I gave them the documentation for the steering and recommended toe and caster settings, I'm taking them at their word that they set it correctly.
Before I paid for the service, the tech had me come out to where Moby was parked, and pointed out that the front right tire was rubbing on the front fender when the steering was turned. My initial thought was, "I'll just trim the corner of the plastic bumper covers, no big deal." I had already suspected this might be an issue, RE states the lift I installed accommodates 31" tires, and the 265/75-16 tires I put on are about 31.6"
It wasn't until I got home that I realized the tech specifically pointed out the front right corner, because that was the only spot it was rubbing. Well crap, I knew why it was rubbing there and no where else.
One of Moby's fender benders in its previous life had squished in the front right corner, not severe, but there was a slight buckle in the front right fender, and the front right bumper cover was a little contorted. For no more than we paid for Moby, it wasn't bothering us, and was merely cosmetic, until I put the over sized tires on it.
And so it begins... It's very much the Butterfly Effect, one thing leads to another, my dad calls it "tripping over stuff." You go to fix one thing, and trip over 3 others that need fixed before you can fix the thing you set out to fix in the first place.
It wasn't an immediate goal, but I was eventually going to replace the fender, build a winch bumper to replace the tweaked stock bumper, and repair/replace the header panel. Instead of just trimming off the spot that was rubbing, I decided to go attempt to fix it "right." I use quotes, the stock bumper will eventually get tossed, as well as the corner bumper cover thingies, so they're getting repaired, but I'm not looking for concourse good as new perfection here. The fender needed replaced too, and thanks to my buddy Brian (ridinwitcj73 here on GRM) I scored a matching stone white front right fender from one of his parts Jeeps.
Here's the tweaked bumper, with the plastic bumper cover off, it was pushed back about 2-1/2" and down about 2" compared to the left side.
I used various modes of persuasion to get the bumper to submit, and do what I wanted it too, including various large blunt instruments swung with great fervor, and a long piece of pipe for leverage. However, this wound up being the most efficient, and maybe just a little bit dangerous method.
With the right side of the bumper now persuaded within ~1/4" of what I measured the left side to be, I decided that was close enough, cleaned it up with a wire cup brush on the grinder, then slathered it with some Rust-Oleum primer, and some Dupli-Color stone white. Yeah it's still a little crinkled, and there's a crease where I bent it back, but that'll be hidden under the bumper cover.
Before I put the new fender on, I cleaned up some previous repairs I had done when I welded in a new nut for the body/chassis ground, cleaned up the inner fender, treated a few minor surface rust spots, and put a coat of Eastwood Internal Frame Coating on it while I had access.
I've currently got the new fender Brian gave me on, and panel gaps good enough. I've been doing some fiber glass work. I used my heat gun and a pair of pliers to reshape the bumper cover, then it got some fiberglass reinforcement, some Bondo, sanding, and some primer. I ran out of white paint, so I'm in a holding pattern until I get more. It's plastic and if I bump anything with it, the paint may very well crack, but it should last long enough, and look good enough to keep SWMBO happy until I build a new bumper for it.
The header panel is a challenge, it was broken, had several cracks, and the bottom right corner, was folded under for so long, that it's now permanently that shape. A smart man would just get a new one or good used one. Every time I've been to Pick-n-Pull the XJ header panels are already gone, or in the same shape or worse than the one we've got. The header panel is fiberglass, and I've managed to repair part of it, but the section that was folded under is being difficult. Maybe I'll persevere?