PROJECT: |
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Bryan
Takes His Freshly Built Suzuki Sidekick Across
Country, First Impressions... |
Editor: Eric Bewley
Photo: B.
Zeigler, E. Bewley, V. Mueller, G. Fuller |
NASHVILLE, TN -
Those of you who followed the Project
Godzuki Resurrection thread
in the forum and on
the home page know that I shipped my Sidekick out to Liberty
Overland to get an over haul. We took quite some time discussing,
planning, reviewing options for the build before coming up with detailed
design. We decided on an all new truck instead of rebuilding the one I had
abused for the past 14 years. Through out the process I went form wanting
a Mike Hagen Rock
Star style Sidekick using all of my existing components, to a V6
version of Blake Savage’s Samurai / Sidekick combo, to an all out Suzuki
powered V6 tube buggy. One of the
only common themes between these thoughts and ideas was that I wanted to
have V6 power, actual power in my Suzuki no matter what shape or form the
rest of the vehicle was, it needed power. We finally came to a
final design that incorporated several products and ideas from many
different vendors and scratch built items from the Liberty Overland shop
that created a long distance cruiser that is a capable and comfortable
driving the freeway as it is traversing the hard-core trails and scenic
byways of our great nation. Even after a year of discussions and changing
of designs, the staff at Liberty Overland was still as open and eager to
help me get exactly what I wanted out of my new adventure vehicle as the
day we began.

Needless to say once a final design was
developed we were eager to get the job done. After ordering a pile of
parts and many long hours in the shop Eric sent me some updated pictures
showing me the new ride; sitting on bump stops, no interior, half the body
work complete and all the fine details still to be completed. At that
point we were only 4-6 weeks form the completion date and I decided that I
did not want to see the vehicle again until it was complete. Over the next
few weeks, we discussed details but I had not seen a picture of the
ride until Christmas Day. When I arrived to pick up my ride, I felt like kid on Christmas morning getting a brand new big wheel (those
Lexus Christmas commercials have nothing on this). Talk about PERFECT;
they had developed exactly what I had envisioned, only better. The urban
camo wrap with a thanks to the armed forces subtly showing through,
overlaying the bright blue paint. A stance that accommodates the 37x12.50
Mickey Thompson MTZ’s but still low enough to fit into the parking
garage at work (only 6’4” clearance). The sweet custom body work that
allows the 37’s to stuff inside the fenders without a body lift. The
attention to detail on this truck was incredible. Besides the words,
‘this is perfect’, I was literally speechless.
| After a couple of days in the
shop (that I requested so I could actually say I ‘worked’ on
my rig) I was eager to get a little play time in and hit the road.
We headed up to one of Eric and Greg’s club members property to
try it out in a play area he was developing. With all the rough
weather they were having, man it was muddy. A 3-5’ deep obstacle
with 2-4’ rocks scattered about over its 50-60’ length made
me realize that I was really bad out of practice when it came to
wheeling. (Two years in Florida + one year building the rig = 3
years with little or no time behind the wheel). Once I realized
that there was no way I was going to flip the low and wide Kick
and to use the available V-6 power (that I had never had before)
it was a blast playing in the thick muddy soils of the North West. |

|
 |
Way too quickly was my allotted 5
days in Oregon over. It was ‘Good Times’ as always hanging out
with my good friends, and making a few new friends, but it was
time for this ‘Southern Canadian’ to head south. I was both eager and weary about my
trip ahead. Most everyone thought I was insane to drive a freshly
built Sidekick on 37’s across the country, but when they heard
that I was going to do it after a trip all the way down the west
coast; I think I convinced them that I was. |
After a late start I was on the road
around 6 pm on Tuesday and heading to Imperial Beach California. For those
of you not familiar with the locations, I was leaving western central
Oregon and heading to my destination located less than 3 miles form
Mexico. The drive down went relatively quickly. The new ride did great at
65 mph and made fairly quick work of the trip through California, putting
me in Southern California mid afternoon the next day. I was shocked at how
comfortable the vehicle was on the road. I had many people asking “WHY
put a Kick on 37’s” usually followed by “how streetable will it
be?” I was expecting the vehicle to be drivable on the road but not
comfortable. I definitely did not expect to have that kind of power AND
decent gas mileage all combined into a built Kick. Cruising at 65, the
2.5L Suzuki V6 held it’s speed with just a light tough of the gas and
only dropped out of overdrive on the steepest of passes (but still could
hold it’s speed on any incline). I was ‘warned’ to watch the temp on
any vehicle when climbing ‘The Grape Vine’ coming out of the valley
into LA. The Kick held the speed limit through the entire pass and barely
even increased in temperature. The
Corbeau seats kept me comfortable and secure for the entire trip, they
even slept well during my 3 hour cat nap at 3am; I only started getting
wrestles after over 15 hours in the seat while dancing my way through LA
traffic. This was another area that the Kick preformed excellent. Slow
moving, 6 lanes of traffic that suddenly blast form 5-50 mph then back on
the brakes to avoid people jockeying for position. If you did not keep up
with the flow you would be cut off and get nowhere. Once again the V6
proved it’s worth being able to run with traffic while still keeping a
cool head and not heating up.
| After enjoying New Years Eve and
New Years Day with friends in Imperial Beach, it was time for the
marathon road trip to continue. We had plans to do the trip from
the California coast to Tennessee non stop, only pulling over to
get gas every 180 miles or so. Then a quick 40 hours later, I was
home sitting on my couch. Besides the scenery blasting by at 65,
there is not much to tell about the ride cross country. Due to me
leaving to go out of town on business less that 24 hours after
getting back form the road trip, we used the extra time as a
buffer (if any thing went wrong) instead of stopping and checking
out sites. We did take a couple of short rides down desert roads
in New Mexico and Texas for a break to the same ol’ 4 lanes of
pavement blasting by, but nothing to memorable. |
 |
My first impressions of my new Liberty
Overland Adventure Vehicle: It’s awesome! It is exactly what I was
looking for and more. I am looking forward to many years of dependable
service out of it, like I have had out of all my Suzuki’s.

Now that I am home for a few weeks,
it’s time to put some local miles in the seat and to go wheeling. Now
all I need is a full weekend off and I’m heading to the trails. Over the
next few months I will be putting my new ride through the ringer to see
just how capable of an adventure rig it is. I will keep you updated on the
rides, road trips and adventures.
Larger images available here: Click
here.
Forum
Discussion Here.
























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