.........and getting the front over obstacles was easier with the front a tad higher.
Your not gonna gain much if any, but you will LOOSE departure angle
.........and getting the front over obstacles was easier with the front a tad higher.
how did you get the GM centercaps to fit the H2 wheels?
This is a good stance, just needs bigger tires![]()

One more thought and then I'll leave it alone, the only time the ass low look is ok is when you have a REAL honest to god pre-runner type truck. If not you just look like one of those Monster chugging flatbiller homos who want "the look".
Remember when 33s were "big" and 35s were "huge"?![]()

I ressemble that remark. Except for the flatbiller homo thing.

There are 2 ways to do it...
1. buy the proper caps that fit on alloy wheels, they will fit perfectly inside the lug surface of the H2 wheels.
2. (what I did) don't do enough research, buy the wrong caps that fit the steel wheels, spend about an hour with a cut off wheel trimming them to fit while still leaving the 4 "pins" inside that space them out from the wheel.
I suggest option 1. Unless you already own the wrong ones, like I did.
After that I just drilled through 2 of them with a hole saw for the front hubs to poke through. 2 and 5/8ths" IIRC... it was nearly the exact size of the emlem in the middle.
You can kinda tell by looking at them. If the base of the cap "flares out" around the lug cap holes, it's for steel wheels. If the lug cap holes are the widest part and the base indents in between them, they are for alloys. That's the simplest and best description I can come up with. I basically cut the "flare" off the ones I had so they would fit.