Thanks, Helbigtw. I did see your post showing the brake deterioration. WOW!!! While that's a mark of bad quality parts, nothing $200 and a few hours in the garage wrenching can't fix. I don't mind wrenching on cars but know I won't be able to tear apart transmissions, engines, and complex assemblies. Not to mention hassle. Something to keep an eye on for sure. My old pathfinder ate brakes regularly. 3 sets of rotors in 56k miles. Finally the radiator clogged, overheated and warped the head gasket. It was sold instantly for the 4runner before it blew the head gasket. It has A LOT of other issues constantly as well, mostly electrical, and the suspension was terrible for towing.
My 4runner has been perfect up until recently (78K) miles. Transmission problems and leaking manifold. I am hopeful the tranny shop can get me going long enough to trade in the runner. Suffice to say I'm soured on the Toyota brand big time-the transmission should not fail with that many miles, considering it's the same tranny as the Land Cruiser and GX470 pulling MUCh less weight. My old 20 year old MR2 Turbo was more reliable, and it was pushing 300hp modified and beaten on regularly (drinks).
My camping excursions are normally twice a year in WV. After a 220 mile ride, about 10 miles of the trip is fairly steep up and down, perhaps 20% grades in several places for roughly a mile, but nothing extreme ground clearance wise on the main road. I used to just gear down and take it slowly, letting the engine braking work and to keep the transmission from excess strain up hills. Ground clearance is a concern however-not on the county roads as much as the entrance to the campsite. I suspect going very slow and paying attention to where the tires contact will minimize bottoming. In other words staying out of the ruts, which the 4runner laughed at.
With that said, some friends vehicles (older ranger, older Jeep Grand Cherokee) struggled and over heated brakes on these roads. I don't think they geared down though.
Is there a means to increase clearance without affecting normal use (i.e. air suspension assist)? Not that I want to modify the CX-9 struts or suspension and ruin any "zoom-zoom" nature of the car.
I do see what you mean about the exhaust and engine pan. Considering 95%+ of the time I just need to commute and run around town on flat paved roads, I'm inclined to go with a crossover rather than a box frame. I may even rent an F150 or similar if I take the boat longer distances, to keep wear off the CX-9. Considering HD SUV frames are limited to Jeeps and 4runners, not much choice. I will not buy an American car until quality changes drastically (would love to drive an american car but been there done that, learned lessons). And the 4runners while nice, just aren't what they used to be. Complaints abound and Toyota is just not backing up their products anymore. Shame.
I'm also looking at the Tribeca's but they seem a little small and the transmission hunts for gears way too much, not to mention rougher and noisy. My wife has a newer Legacy with the 3.6 (same drivetrain as the Tribeca) and while it's a great car the transmission hunting and roughness turns me off.
I will probably get the GT with 20's but am already considering acquiring another of rims (17 or 18) with all terrain tires, for winter and camping only. Nothing like AWD and good tires in bad weather!!
Sorry for the long winded post!