Yeah I drive this thing all the time. I used to drive it just to drive it. It has more beach and trail miles on it than anything but I used to take it upstate and to PA and Ohio and stuff, Its been to Florida a bunch of times too. It has 3.08's in it so I can go anywhere without revving high. It came from GM with 2.73's in it and I swapped them out for 3.73's but stepped down a few months later to 3.42's. I was driving it 6 days a week to college and work and ended up doing about 120 miles a day minimum, sometimes 180 miles a day depending on where I had to go for work. Thats how I ended up with 3.08's again. it was either that or an NV4500 swap and I didnt have the money for it.
As for the rollover, I was having fun with a buddy of mine and 2 girls we were friendly with. We went for a ride in the trails by my old house and I told the girls to buckle up. We had the cap off and jokingly I told them if it looked like we were going over to tuck down and hug your legs (nice thing about girls that did gymnastics... Ohh yeah...) to make a long story short they weren't buckled in, went flying out along with my toolbox and amplifier and recovery crate and I ended up down the hill about another 200' from where they were in a washout. I was trying to steer out of it but the ground got real loose and just gave way. The truck rolled over and if it weren't for the cap being off, we wouldn't have been able to get out. I was about 10' from the edge where it dropped off and the whole land mass just let go. Def. a wild ride! As we were hanging from the seatbelts I shut it off. My buddy looks and says "hey look! the console stayed shut!" as he turns the knob and everything goes flying all over the truck. It was one hell of a long night getting the truck back out of the hole and on all 4's but once we did I was able to drive it to work the next day. The truck kind of fit in the washout like an upside-down plug. I guess the fact that it was mostly dirt and soft sand really saved the truck. Almost everything buffed out.