weekly update
Wow, what a long week. In fact it's been a couple of long weeks. Quick summary: IT RUNS!! but........ she's not moving all that well meaning probable tranny rebuild sooner than later.
There are many ways to do this and and probably better but this is what I came up with for the lower radiator hose. I had to adapt the 2 1/2" to a 1 1/2" with a funny angle. I couldn't find any copper elbows big enough but I did find a plumbing elbow that had close to a 2 1/2" o.d. It is actually list as 1 1/2" i.d. Then I just got some 2 1/2" radiator hose from Napa.
I took in a half of my 4bt upper hose to Napa and had them find something that had a similar bend. They had something so I used that new piece as the second half of the upper hose and used this older piece to connect to the FJ60 lower. I picked up an exhaust reducer from 2 1/4" to 1 1/2". This is the lower section of the frankenstein hose.
This is how it goes together.
After I invested in some hose clamp stock I picked up some better clamps and put it on. The engine side clamp is not small enough so I'll need to get a smaller one and eliminate the second clamp from the top. Hey, sometimes more clamps are better

. It makes me laugh looking at it but it works.
Friday was a very good day. Kevcj came over and put in 9 hours with me and we got a ton of little stuff done. Little stuff like circle clips, front hubs, rear lug nuts, filler neck tube to the gas tank, finished routing lines to the heat exchanger, making a mount for the heat exhanger, wiring, hooking up power, oh yeah we even got the engine RUNNING!
The tranny cooler/heat exchanger came with a mount base. We heated it up and bent some parts and now it's on the firewall.
We had to troubleshoot a few things before it would actually start. This is what we did: We hooked up the battery and found a switched 12v source from one of the connectors on the driver side that wasn't being used. We wanted it hot once the key was in the ignition spot. I got new fuel, took off the fuel filters and filled them up. Then we put the rest of the fuel in the tank. We primed it using the primmer on the lift pump. The arm went limp. Then we tried to start it. The starter turned over very slow. After some additional batteries and a couple of jumper cables we found that the ground was not efficient. I had put it where the last one was and that was on the fender. I scratched off the paint but the ground was inefficient. Once we went to the frame with the ground it spun the starter much faster and I now get the instant start that I got in the stepvan. We used the big, thick cables that came from the stepvan and had plenty of room to re-route the ground. I ground the engine and the battery to the passenger side diagonal brace that already had two bolt holes in it from removing that front undercover (I think this is FJ60 specific), anyways the threaded holes were already there. The engine started up and stumbled for about 20 seconds and then it settled into a rock solid idle. I didn't have to bleed the injector lines. The fun came when I tried to turn it off and it kept running when I took the key out of the ignition. There is a manual shut off on the injector pump and I used that to stop the engine. After talking it out we must have used some wire that continued to get power after the key was out. I knew the coil wire was good but it was on the other side of the engine bay. I decided to tag off of that wire to try it out but Kevcj, who already stayed later then he planned, could go home and leave me dumbfounded that things actually worked. I hooked up that wire and the engine started and stopped with the turn of the key like it should so I'll just clean up the routing of that coil wire. If you are doing a swap, label your wires, I did and it was easy to find them 7 months later when I needed them again. Also before I started the engine I put in any necessary fluids like power steering, engine oil, coolant, and ATF since I'm running an auto.
With the engine running I could see a few leaks I needed to fix. The biggest one was the block heater. The next day I took it out and found a tighter fitting o-ring at the hardware store. It wasn't as easy to get to since everything was on the engine now but with the air filter off it was accessible. HINT: When I put it back on I tightened it as far as I could get with a little allen head wrench but it didn't feel tight enough so I got some socket extensions and tapped it with a hammer. I tighten it some more. I did this a couple of times until the block heater looked almost flush with the block. Now it doesn't leak.
In order to take it around the block I needed to get the front wheels on so I did an alignment. This is how I measure for 1/8th toe-in. I found some straight angle, clamped them on, measure out equal distance on the front and back and compared. Pretty simple.
I went to my friend's shop and he helped me shorten the rear driveshaft. Finished up other stuff and went for a drive. I forgot to put the doubler and TC in gear but figured that out. Then it still wouldn't move. I increased the rpms and it finally started to move.
Got the hood on (yes I re-routed the air cleaner, this one's just temporary until the other one comes in), hooked up the dash and tested the lights. Only one bulb worked on the dash so I turned the others around in the sockets and now the others worked. LEDS are polarity specific so it matters which way they go in. You'll only know if you get it right when they do or don't come on. I really like how the lighting turned out and they do dim if needed. I then took it on the freeway to go the a cruiser christmas party.
I got on the freeway and couldn't get overdrive. I thought earlier that I wasn't getting third gear but it was actually overdrive. So this is what I'd get: 1st good, 2nd good, nothing in the 3rd spot, 3rd in the 4th spot, and no overdrive. I was going maybe 55 mph on the freeway (had my wife chasing behind me and we used little radios to communicate). It felt like 3rd is slipping (1:1 ratio). I got off at the next exit (2 miles) and turned around to go home. It was a good first test but with unfortunate results. I have the trans manual and will look it over to see if it's something simple but I'm leaning towards a rebuild. Since I don't have a dipstick low fluid is a possibility. I think I had 10-11 quarts in it. I added 3 more for a total of 14 quarts and took it out yesterday but it was doing the same thing. I should be getting my dipstick today so I'll have to see how it reads once I get it installed. Bummer, looks like we won't be taking it to California after all for the christmas visit. I didn't have a muffler on it when I was on the freeway and it was loud. I hooked the stepvan one up yesterday before the tranny test and it helped. I was worried because I haven't hooked up shocks yet but it wasn't that bad without them and I took it easy and left myself room to stop.
Here are some pics of the engine with the hood on. I have a clearance issue with the overflow tank and will need to cut of the mount and weld it on a little lower.