Take a look at my ride. I’m running 315’s on 9” wide with 5” backspaced wheels and a 2” leveling kit. And yes, they DID rub a little due to the offset. But with a little help from my heat gun, I pushed back the areas of the front wheel liners that were rubbing. I also trimmed just a little of the inner front air dam with a grinder (you wouldn’t even notice it). I checked for rubbing by jacking up the end of each axle individually. In-turn, articulating the suspension and turning the steering wheel while spinning the tire. If I would have stayed with the stock wheels (which I don’t like the look of), I’m sure I wouldn’t have had any problems with rubbing. I can also turn the steering wheel lock to lock with no rubbing anywhere. I think there is a chance of mild rubbing when you’re out driving way too fast for the terrain or during heavy throttle or braking with the suspension heavily compressed due to body movement on the frame and/or compression of the suspension arm bushings.
I went wheeling, not the Rubicon or anything major, but more than just a dirt road and had no problem rubbing. I will take it out this weekend and intentionally “cross it up” and see what happens. I’ll report back the findings.
Keep in mind, the lift you saw in the magazine article has longer arms. So basically it will push the tire into the front air dam under articulation. That’s one reason to use the stock arms with little or no lift up front or trim the air dam, its only replaceable plastic.
If you are seriously concerned with rubbing, stay with the 305’s or 285’s instead of the 315’s and defiantly don’t go off road because you might get your truck dirty or even scratched. LOL
Be very careful of what tire you pick. The BFG A/T’s work well and don’t catch the wheel liners as easy as a mudder, especially Swampers, due to their tread shoulder design. If you get them too tall and wide, they will rub on everything including your suspension components. Not a good thing.
These things aren’t jeeps. In stock configuration they are 6000+ pound full size trucks with limited articulation due to the heavy springs, over load springs and short front wheel compression travel. If you want a nice suspension, but don’t want to jack it up a bunch, check out the T-REX Engineering suspension system, it’s very off road capable, but still no rock crawler. You can always wait for the new 6” rock crawler suspensions from Superlift, but you would probably still rub the tires.
Just giving you my 1. 5 cents