100 Series Interior Door Panels

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Joined
Apr 27, 2023
Threads
1
Messages
5
Location
Connecticut
HI Guys,
I am new to the forums. I have a 1999 Toyota Land Cruiser that I have made a nice build out of. So now I want to replace my tan door panels because I got a tear in a couple of the interior door pockets. Where can I get a good condition used front and rear door panel which doesnt have broken clips? I have been looking to no avail. Any help is appreciated. Oh, and I am also looking for new tan cloth floor and cargo mats. Thank you!
 
HI Guys,
I am new to the forums. I have a 1999 Toyota Land Cruiser that I have made a nice build out of. So now I want to replace my tan door panels because I got a tear in a couple of the interior door pockets. Where can I get a good condition used front and rear door panel which doesnt have broken clips? I have been looking to no avail. Any help is appreciated. Oh, and I am also looking for new tan cloth floor and cargo mats. Thank you!

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Good luck…I’ve been scouring part-outs and junkyards for a driver door card for 5 years and haven’t found one worth a $hit yet…
 
What TM said above is your best bet. Nice looking truck man. Love the Blueberry...
 
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Also, be ready for "Hey, who makes those fender flares?"
CutSnake from OZ. I had to chase them down for months though. lol. I am not sure that I would put them on again as their material is very rigid and their buffer rubber strips aren't my favorite solution. It requires a lot of coping which doesnt look fun, or else the shortcut (here) is to mount them too low, so they overlap my SLEE bumper, and the rubber strip doesn't make it across from the fender to the bumper. So the fender flare was chaffing the bumper and causing rust, so I has to repaint (and remount) the bumper but with a self-made plastic buffer glued onto the bumper to prevent chaffing. Pride of ownership is the phrase, right?

Enjoy the pictures!
 
What TM said above is your best bet. Nice looking truck man. Love the Blueberry...
Thank you! It took a loooong time. You can see the stages in the pictures (not in order unfortunately). I started in 2017 with the lift and differential drop and the ARB and SLEE bumpers, and I finally got the low-profile Rhino Rack on in January 2020. In 2017 I think I must have been the first person with Fuel wheels, and I think I made the right call because now I see them everywhere. lol!
 
I see great minds think alike. ;) I must be the last Series 100 to put on a Blueberry. It's my favorite part on my truck.
Yes sir! Love the profile
 
You can also consider getting a quote from an upholstery shop to recover them
 
I went the route of sourcing some salvage yard used door panels. Ended up with 6 panels + entire dash and surrounding plastics, along with a sweet steering wheel from @ClassyJalopy. All of which had sun damage from southern US states and had all different colors when the best were put together. Now all are in an upholstery shop being redone so as to have some continuity. I would advise skipping this route and going straight to an upholstery shop or purchase of brand new ones otherwise they WILL have different colors due to factors like: garage kept, outside storage, window tint, poor window tinting, or age in general. Just my two pennies and experience. The color difference inside makes my OCD flare up. I wasted tons of money and time as a result.
 
You could remove and take to an upholstery shop and have it recovered in Alcantra.(fake suede). Friend of mine has a Rover shop and they do this with door cards and head liners a lot.

Another cooler thought is have some custom made- won’t be cheap but they will be long lasting. They can build from aluminum backer- add high density foam substrate, shape it and cover in alcantra or leather or what ever.

I came across a custom fab shop locally that builds some pretty nice SEMA level customs and they make their own door cards with a CNC table router/mill set up to shape foam. The end product is remarkable. It’s not a unique process so I’m sure you could find similar near you.
 
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