If you know, you know......
As much as it hurts, I'm hopefully getting out of mine this season. A couple Alumicrafts in our group's orbit have recently wrecked, and its just not something I want to experience physically or financially. Our group drives these cars like they were designed to be driven and I feel its not if, its when..... Seasons of life change and I'm way more interested in my early life interest of rock crawling versus the sand these days.
Some things that set Alumicraft apart.
1. Geometry - you aren't eating heims or CV's because they aren't binding at all throughout the range of motion of the suspension like MANY cars out there. The cars flat out work, predictable and controllable.
2. Chassis Design/Strength - it'll save your life when you need it, proven time and time again unfortunately

3. Fit & finish - unmatched from the very first cars that were built to some of the most recent. Yes, many builders have closed that gap now, but early 2000's to mid teens, I don't think you could convince me otherwise that an Alumicraft wasn't the best complete package.
4. John Cooley - It is unfortunate that John is no longer a part of Alumicraft. He remembered every car, knew the history, and treated you as an equal to the million dollar baja racers that spent hundreds of thousands at his hop. I've never had an interaction with someone similar to the couple of interactions I had with John. I didn't "belong" in that shop, but he treated me like I did. I'll also never forget how clean their bathroom was....I know that is a weird thing to stand out, but I think it just shows what his ethos was for how he ran his operation.
We have had a pretty large group of strictly Alumicrafts in our group over the past 7 years, from some of the earliest cars, to the newest. Probably a bit snobbish looking from the outside, but not a single car in our group was ever "annoying". You know the guys & cars I'm taking about, the guy that is always broke, needing to fix this, needing to fuck with that. These cars were designed and built right, and as long as they are maintained, will give you many years of trouble free duning. The crazy part is, you can do some subtle style upgrades to an early car, and it's hard to tell them apart from a car built a decade later, and they still perform just as well.
You can't touch the heritage, style, or performance package of a Cooley Car in the sand IMO.... but I'm admittedly very biased!


















