no pics of the swap yet, camera broke, but here is a pic from a couple months ago:
questions first:
1) how do i get my efi tachometer (sending unit was the distributor) to work with the 3B's flywheel sender?
2) i currently am running the glow plugs off a 25 amp switch w/o any relay. i don't think the switch will like this in the long term. i have both the primary and secondary glow relays from a 12V 60 that i can use but there are more than 4 pins. which relay do i use and what pins? also i'm using new sheathed BOSCH 7V plugs. Are they ok for manual? How long should i have them on for? 15 secs is working great but is that too much for the plugs?
3) Is there a choke on this motor? I don't see anything on the throttle body.
4) The engine misses when starting cold. normal or am not glowing enough? (15 secs)
5) anything else i should know about this motor? ~200,000km runs great, i'm gonna adjust the valves and do the injectors when i have some time. also burns a little oil when started cold for a minute or 2. normal?
background:
always wanted a 4x4 Toyota diesel, a BJ60 actually, but around here they're always rusty and overpriced. 2 years ago I came across an '85 efi 4Runner in good shape for cheap, and I sprung on it. I was actually happy I ended up with the 4Runner- mini trucks make great rockcrawlers, the build up is cheaper than a croozer too.
But i always wanted efficient diesel power... i looked into the factory L series diesels... expensive, rare, timing belt, cracking heads, still pretty gutless... So I started looking at 3Bs they seemed cheaper and more readily available, and I always wanted one in a 60... the idea of a 3B in a mini truck has been debated before, too big, too heavy, too much work. I didn't care. Before I knew it I had a 3B sitting in the shop.
I started just before Christmas and finished (well started driving it again) about 2 weeks ago. Still need to finish the hood and put my winch back on.
How i got'r dun:
i'm forgetting everything at an alarming rate but basically i took a '85 Toyota Landcruiser 3.4L 4cyl diesel (3B, 12volt) and '83 cast iron bellhousing, ('85 bellhousing is aluminum) and hacked the tranny side of it off, milled it down to a total height of 6.285", and welded a .375" plate to the bellhousing. i had predrilled this plate to bolt to my '85s stock w56 tranny prior to welding. I used the W56 bellhousing as a drill jig for accuracey and to save time. I also took this opportunity to clock my entire drivetrain about 10 deg when welding the plate. i used the 3B clutch assembly, the disc is the same 21 spline as my W56 tranny, pilot bearing fit too. I used the 3B clutch fork and bearing, had to weld a nut to that .375" plate on the bellhousing for the fork ball-pivot to go into. for motor mounts i had to shorten one of the arms bolted to the block, so both sides were roughly equal. hacked the old mounts off the frame, made new frame brackets from 3.5x3.5" x .1875" tube. burned them on, finished deleting my rad support so i could fit the rad (stock 4runner for now, have custom 4 row for later), and that was basically it. no wiring except for a manual glow plug system, which is easy enough, and of course all the sending unit plugs were the same....
i guess this makes my truck a bastardized land croozer, model code BN65

questions first:
1) how do i get my efi tachometer (sending unit was the distributor) to work with the 3B's flywheel sender?
2) i currently am running the glow plugs off a 25 amp switch w/o any relay. i don't think the switch will like this in the long term. i have both the primary and secondary glow relays from a 12V 60 that i can use but there are more than 4 pins. which relay do i use and what pins? also i'm using new sheathed BOSCH 7V plugs. Are they ok for manual? How long should i have them on for? 15 secs is working great but is that too much for the plugs?
3) Is there a choke on this motor? I don't see anything on the throttle body.
4) The engine misses when starting cold. normal or am not glowing enough? (15 secs)
5) anything else i should know about this motor? ~200,000km runs great, i'm gonna adjust the valves and do the injectors when i have some time. also burns a little oil when started cold for a minute or 2. normal?
background:
always wanted a 4x4 Toyota diesel, a BJ60 actually, but around here they're always rusty and overpriced. 2 years ago I came across an '85 efi 4Runner in good shape for cheap, and I sprung on it. I was actually happy I ended up with the 4Runner- mini trucks make great rockcrawlers, the build up is cheaper than a croozer too.
But i always wanted efficient diesel power... i looked into the factory L series diesels... expensive, rare, timing belt, cracking heads, still pretty gutless... So I started looking at 3Bs they seemed cheaper and more readily available, and I always wanted one in a 60... the idea of a 3B in a mini truck has been debated before, too big, too heavy, too much work. I didn't care. Before I knew it I had a 3B sitting in the shop.
I started just before Christmas and finished (well started driving it again) about 2 weeks ago. Still need to finish the hood and put my winch back on.
How i got'r dun:
i'm forgetting everything at an alarming rate but basically i took a '85 Toyota Landcruiser 3.4L 4cyl diesel (3B, 12volt) and '83 cast iron bellhousing, ('85 bellhousing is aluminum) and hacked the tranny side of it off, milled it down to a total height of 6.285", and welded a .375" plate to the bellhousing. i had predrilled this plate to bolt to my '85s stock w56 tranny prior to welding. I used the W56 bellhousing as a drill jig for accuracey and to save time. I also took this opportunity to clock my entire drivetrain about 10 deg when welding the plate. i used the 3B clutch assembly, the disc is the same 21 spline as my W56 tranny, pilot bearing fit too. I used the 3B clutch fork and bearing, had to weld a nut to that .375" plate on the bellhousing for the fork ball-pivot to go into. for motor mounts i had to shorten one of the arms bolted to the block, so both sides were roughly equal. hacked the old mounts off the frame, made new frame brackets from 3.5x3.5" x .1875" tube. burned them on, finished deleting my rad support so i could fit the rad (stock 4runner for now, have custom 4 row for later), and that was basically it. no wiring except for a manual glow plug system, which is easy enough, and of course all the sending unit plugs were the same....
i guess this makes my truck a bastardized land croozer, model code BN65
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