This has come up several times on the FB page as well as in the forum so I'll give me 2 cents.
First you've got to ask yourself, where are you having problems. Is it onroad or off? For onroad you'll want to look at your axle gears. When installing larger tires from stock, you effectively change the ratio to a higher set of gears.
Onroad:In stock form, your stock tires were probably 27" (205.75R15, aka: base stock tires) and then you change them to 33''s. Those stock 4.10's are now are equivalent to 3.35's. To get the gearing back to stock you would need 5.01:1. Since they do not make 5.01's, and to compensate for the extra weight of the tires you'd probably go with 5.13:1. This will give you close to the same RPM as you would have at a given speed as stock. It however doesn't account for the decrease in aerodynamics.
Offroad:Now, your final crawl ratio would be the combination of the transmission gear x transfer case gear x axle gear. In this case, in first gear (3.92), 4-Low (2.72) and stock axle gears (4.11), you would have a final ratio of 43.8:1. Now if we changed the axle ratio to 5.13:1 the final ratio changes to 54.7:1. Not that much of a difference.
If you change the transmission to something like a SM420 (7.05:1) , SM465 (6.55:1), NP435 (6.681:), etc.. this would give you a final crawl ratio of 78.8 to 1, 73 to 1 and 74.5 to 1 respectively. Keep in mind that these are 4-speed transmissions so for a daily driver, they aren't going to be optimal with a non-syncro'ed first and a huge jump to second and no overdrive. Most people who go this route are doing it in conjunction with transfer case gears and or are towing their Jeep to the trail.
For most people I recommend looking for lower gears in the transfer case. Options would be a Rubicon 241OR, TeraFlex's 4to1, Atlas 2, doubler boxes: like the KluneV, Rooster, Blackbox, etc.., or go all out and get an Atlas 4.
Again stock Jeep with a Teraflex 4to1 (3.94 x 4 x 4.10) would have a final ratio of 64.7:1. You can already see this makes a huge difference. With 5.13 axle gears that jumps to 80:1 which is very respectable.
Now with the doubler boxes you can have some extremely low gears which are great for the 2.5L.
Again a stock geared 2.5L with a 2.72:1 doubler would have (3.94x2.72x2.72,4.10) would have 119:1 final crawl ratio. A better option would be to have them different ratios so you have more choices in your gearing. The cheapest would be to keep the stock 2.72:1 in the transfer case and add a 4:1 KlineV David. This would give you a 176:1 final crawl ratio. The downside is that you'd need to beef up the stock transfer case with a Heavy duty output shaft and upgrade the chain and sprocket set from the 1" wide chain to the 1.25" chain on the Heavy Duty versions.
The best option though is the Atlas 4. This is an Atlas 2 (4.3:1) with an integrated doubler (2.72:1) attached to it. A stock 2.5L would have the stock 44:1 with just the doubler, 69:1 with just the main Atlas or a compound crawl ratio of 189:1.
Here's the cavit though. If you need speed, ultra low gears aren't going to help. Lower gears help by multiplying the torque. With an engine that has 140 lbs-ft at peak, you have to gear lower than a V8 with 300 lbs-ft at peak. Even off peak, they will have more than your peak torque.
tl:drCrawl Ratios at a glance:
Stock -44:1
Stock w/5.13 - 55:1
Stock w/Teraflex - 65:1
Stock w/SM465 - 73:1
Stock w/NP435 - 74.5:1
Stock w/SM420 - 79:1
Stock w/Teraflex & 5.13 - 80:1
Stock w/NP435 & TeraFlex - 107:1
Stock w/SM420 & TeraFlex - 110:1
Stock w/SM465 & TeraFlex - 115:1
Stock w/Doubler - 119:1
Stock w/Atlas 4 (4.3) - 44:1/69:1/189:1
Anyway, food for thought.
https://www.youtube.com/v/HmmXsX1auzc