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I haven’t put a snorkel on.What did you end up deciding? Slee’s doing a big build on my blizzard pearl ‘21 HE next month, and I haven‘t decided on the snorkel yet…
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I haven’t put a snorkel on.What did you end up deciding? Slee’s doing a big build on my blizzard pearl ‘21 HE next month, and I haven‘t decided on the snorkel yet…
You are well on your way, Snorkel train is pulling into the station!
whats next - take my kids 529 and buy bumpers?You are well on your way, Snorkel train is pulling into the station!
the oem cyclone looking ones on the GCC/UN trucks- are those available to us?@ryanCA - It's cheap insurance. That's why I did it. Seriously the Dobinson's snorkel was IIRC $250 at the time.
Installation is more forgiving than you'd think. It comes with a template. It uses huge fender washers for the holes in the fender because you do need to adjust it a bit. Granted I did measure like 5 times...
If you have an aftermarket front bumper, you should get one. I've been in a group with people who had stock and aftermarket bumpers as well as snorkels and no snorkels. The guy who sucked in water was the guy who had a high cut bumper and no snorkel. He was super lucky - just got a "reduced power" warning and when we popped the airbox the filter was holding about 10-15 lbs of water.
Snorkels are like ARB Summit bumpers—looks are subjective and you hope to never need them,..but they can protect against $$ costly damage from water/dust/deer strikes.Personally I'm not at all a fan of snorkels and think they look silly. However! I'm also fully aware of the fact that my aftermarket bumper basically creates a scoop that will likely funnel water into the passenger wheel well, directly to the intake. So I should probably add one. Soon.
thank youSeries 9000 Ejective Precleaner for Engines
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There's another option someone posted here a while back too.
I think so. You'd have to know intake tube diameter to figure out which one you'd need.thank you
super dumb question. Does one buy a dobinson like @linuxgod suggested and you add this head to the top?
Yes your engine bay electronics don't like water. They're water-resistant which is why you can drive in the rain, but they're not designed to be submerged. For a short water crossing where you are moving and the front of your vehicle is pushing a lot of water out of the way it's typically OK.I thought there were other parts of our LC’s that might also get damaged if we drove in deep waters with a snorkel.
Do I have this wrong?
Differentials (which I know can easily be protected by breathers.).
But also electronics?
Or even water ingress inside the cabin.
I thought snorkels were mostly for dust and sand unless one did some serious waterproofing.
Is that Toyota precleaner good to go for 200 series? Anyone have it installed currently? I’ve only seen it on the 80 series…but if I end up installing a snorkel I’d prefer the OEM look over the fence style or the ‘snorkel upgrade’ route.
Yes it is for a 200. Just not sold stateside. If I get the snorkel, that is the one I am getting as well.Is that Toyota precleaner good to go for 200 series? Anyone have it installed currently? I’ve only seen it on the 80 series…but if I end up installing a snorkel I’d prefer the OEM look over the fence style or the ‘snorkel upgrade’ route.