4 globes, 4 OEM upper/lower control arms, king springs, alignments done last week
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which motors did you go with? I cant seem to find the bookmark where I ordered them for my last 100Replacing all 5 door lock actuator motors. Not too bad. Rear doors are super fast to replace vs front doors.
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Nice boots
which motors did you go with? I cant seem to find the bookmark where I ordered them for my last 100
Found a kit of 4 on that jungle website for under $20.FC-280PT-22125
I doubt they even checked them. Most don't, sadly.Road trip prep this past week- diffs/tcase fluid, brake fluid, PS fluid, oil change, plugs. Had a shop replace my inner tie rods and give her an alignment.
Also, I figured out why my rig has been running progressively worse since I got it in '21- The shop that did my initial "baseline" never gapped or torqued the plugs correctly. ALL 8 were at .032 instead of .044. I was also able to remove 3 of the even-bank plugs with almost zero effort. Runs like a completely different rig now.
@rock climber the Toyota shocks did great off camber. Lifted wheels multiple times without issue.
-Lubed the drive shaft and got rid of the rear "clunk" from the slip yoke.
-New OEM shocks all around (don't forget the washers)
- Powder coated OEM wheels and fresh KO2's.
Drives like new again with 215k!
View attachment 3298924Looks great. I was thinking painting my wheels. Was the powder coating a diy job?
Nice work! Going to tackle this in a few weeks! Mine stop working when it gets hot out.Replacing all 5 door lock actuator motors. Not too bad. Rear doors are super fast to replace vs front doors.
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Tried to remove my 2" China wheel spacers today so I can toss them in the junk. I started at the rear, passenger side came off easily, driver side put up a huge fight. Long story short, took me about 2-3 hours to get it off. Fronts should be easy as I regularly service the bearings.
Anyone care to point me in the direction of a moderate 1" quality spacer?
Our first kid is due 1 week from today so had to crank out some work on the 2000! First dropped the cruiser off at Iron Pig Offroad in Fredericksburg, VA to get the frame fixed and power washed. They sealed up a hole in the rear on the driver side frame rail as well as another at the passenger sway bar mount. Super happy with the work they did and they went through much effort to clean the frame for me so that I could apply Eastwood Rust Encapsulator over the next few days. I spend every spare minute (hour really) over the following 4 days painting the entire underside of the vehicle. Every metal bit that I could get to got a coat of Platinum Silver and then another coat of Encapsulator plus (black) over top. This was probably overkill but I don't want to have to do it again for a while and had already purchased the materials needed. I sprayed over it all with their extreme chassis black to give it a nice finish and get some of the silver spots I had missed on the second coat. I also used their internal frame spray to do three coats inside each crossmember and frame rail. Very happy with it all but man was it a beast of a job and got so messy doing it in my driveway. Changed a power steering hose that was causing a leak and found a seized rear caliper in the rear so those made for some "fun" finishing touches in the last push to get everything back together. Feels a lot better to have the frame treated and hoping to get many more years out of it. View attachment 3308460View attachment 3308459View attachment 3308458View attachment 3308457
Thank you for the tip! I did try and have them in place or at least the jack with light pressure on at least one side of the vehicle so that I would not be crushed. It was definitely a little unnerving at times with all 4 wheels off the ground!Great work - glad to get those projects out of the way before your hands are even more full.
As someone with a 'Safety Third' mentality who also wants you to enjoy your forthcoming little one, please put the removed wheels under the sides of that truck when lifted as a safety measure and you're able to extract yourself from underneath, or at least not be crushed.
Yep, that failing electric motor gets heat soaked and loses any power it's got left.Nice work! Going to tackle this in a few weeks! Mine stop working when it gets hot out.