Well, I hate to say that I broke down and bought a body lift. They are not complicated to build, but there is the steering extension to deal with and I wanted to get everything done before winter. I purchased the Masterkit 1 set, and then very shortly found some local guys that make them for $250. CRAP! Not only that, Before I bought the lift, I called and asked Masterkit 1 about the shifter boots being problematic with the body lift (boots not fitting, shifter interference etc...) and they said they have never had problems with it. I did. I thought I might, but tried to cover the bases, and still ended up with the headache. I called them after the install, and all they could recommend is heating and bending the shifter. I am not fond of that idea,and it does not fix the t-case shifter. The biggest problem is that the second boot that comes up from the console bunches up and the shifter hits the plastic on the console when going into 2nd, 4th, and reverse. The t-case shfiter also has a problem with the boot bunching and not allowoing it to shift fully into 4Lo.
My solution was to cut the console with a hole saw at the 4Lo end of the console in front of the t-case boot to give it a bit more room to shift, but I still worry about it popping out of 4Lo when offroading. I am going to do the same with the main shifter, cut some of the plastic off around the hole so the shifter does not hit the plastic, and then use a type of finish stripping to clean up the edge. I will also be cutting the bottom 1 to 1 1/2" off at the front of the console to lower it around the shifter, again to give more room for manuever, and will again finish the cut edge with a trim that I have used before. Its a U shaped piece of black plastic that clips on, similar to the stuff manufacturers use on the pinched metal seams on vehicles.
Another mod I had to perform is the Charcoal canister under the hood. With the body lift, it lifted as well, and was now in the way for the factory air hose to connect from the filter box to the intake. What I did was grind the "V" shaped sides down a bit do it could sit lower in its factory location, and bent the metal tab down at the bottom of the bracket it fits into. I had to remove it to move the brake lines anyway, but this another mod that is not in the manual for the body lift install.
I installed the Cavalier shocks on the rear and they work nicely. The Cherokee springs worked well except that they are bigger around, and rub against the upper mount and make a very irritating noise when they cycle. So I got creative making my own spacers for the rear to work with the factory springs. I had 2 cv axles that were useless laying around, so I took the inner CVs, cut the splines off, drilled and tapped a hole in them for the bump stop, and cut them down to 2 1/2" long at the cupped end, and then fitted them into place. Not as clean as machined spacers, but they'll work just fine with the factory springs. I fabbed a spacer for the Panhard rod using 2" square tubing. Without this spacer, the axle stuck out 1/2" further on one side of the vehicle at ride height with the 2 1/2" lift. I knotched it out to fit onto the factory bracket on the diff, drilled a hole in the bottom and another 2 1/2" higher in the tube, then bolted it in. Worked like a charm. I don't know why everyone sells suspension llift kits without this item.
My home brew spacer on the front seems to have yielded a 2" suspension gain, but the tires have cambered in at the bottom, ALOT. Even with the strut drop bracket. My front tires look like this \ / . I talked to a local guy (Use your local Suzuki Guys, they are very helpful!). He suggested using a smaller bolt in the top hole of the strut mount on the kingpin to gain 1mm or so of camber adjustment, and if that is not enough, drill the holes on the strut bracket bigger (top hole only), to gain another mm or 2 to get the adjustment right, then tighten the bolt and away I go. Simple enough. That is my next project. I worried about it moving, but if anything, the way the force is distributed on the strut at that point, it will only be pushed int he direction I want it to go anyway, so the smaller bolt should not be a problem. I'll use a grade 8 fine thread bolt and strength won't bean issue.
I am also doing a hood snorkel going up to a scoop on the hood, making the snorkel more of a cold ram air intake. The scoop is big enough that I will also mount some lights inside it for NEAT factor. I have got pics of those here.
The tires look amazing, but haven't had them on the road yet.