kling-on
Kool Arrow
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2003
- Threads
- 254
- Messages
- 5,502
- Location
- Pimpin part in SanAntonio TX
- Website
- www.texas4x4.org
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Randy,
Are you doing this to your 62?
There is no where that I can see where the x member will interfere with doing an SOA.
I, however, dont know if your your rig is different than mine. I did NOT have to notch the x member when I did my SOA on my 88 FJ62.
FWIW
Chicago
People who keep saying, "You should have spent money here and there, etc, etc..." can say what they want. I'm pretty sure Travis is the ONLY person who has sprung over for 18 bucks in the 6 years I've been on MUD. This is absolutely the poor, college-kid's way to lift.
Holy crap!Check it out: Scary Steering!
Cruiserdrew mentioned "that guy in Oregon" so I believe he is talking about Overthehill4x4 Welcome
I talked to them a number of times when doing my V8/700R4 conversion and when doing the SOA. They are very helpful. They recommended 4x4Labs Hi-Steer when I asked them about steering options. 4x4labs steering has worked great on my truck. Steers much better than when it was stock.
and why again will i have to take my axle apart? (89s rule)
well its the way you do it to reuse the square front ubolts that you have. but i will get new semi-circular bolts to replace those and cut off the bottom spring perch.
Im sorry you wouldnt want to drive near my awesome truck on the road because you think my steering might explode or something. i suppose on a trail with my tires up against a rock, with me pushing as hard as i can on the wheel the drag link would bend, but are you serious? driving down the road? and do you think some person in oregon has magically discovered the proper way to heat and cool a 1" piece of hollow metal so that it is still strong? I did a fantastic job of being uniform and using the proper amout of heat. And is there really not something to be said for a cheap job that still lives up to standards that i feel are safe and acceptable? thanks for the advice though
Chicago has it right,
W will heat up and bend the stock steering arms (the parts that are bolted to the knuckle) and then let them cool slowly so they do nto become brittle. As creepy as that sounds to me, I have never even heard of one failure over a lot of years.
Your drag link will finish the bend you started at about the most inconvient time possible. That may be on the trail, or it may be going from one place to another on the road. It can fail on the road. And do so very quickly. The constant stress that you will put on the Draglink will weaken it till it dies.. I bent a straight 1" bar stock steering link on my 40. This is considerably weaker.
Your front U bolts are another thing that is creepy. You seem to be a fairly adept welder. But I would still not feel comfortable with that arrangement at all. Even more so with the bashing on rocks that it will potentially get.
Are the shock pins just butt welded to the housing and x member? There is an easier way to do it with the pins that come with any rancho shock and about 6" of reciever hitch tubing.
For less than $100 you can have your steering straightened out and get new U bolts. You'll spend more on gas for a wheeling weekend and be a heck of a lot safer and kinder to those that will be with you when your rig breaks on the trail.
The SO for $18.00 is interesting. Did you extend your brake lines?? Did you do any driveshaft mods? Knuckle rebuild kit? I would be willing to bet that there is a lot that went into that conversion that either needs to be addressed or you are not counting in the tally.
Good work on the CNT and SO. The fab work looks awesome, just take care of a couple of things and GO WHEELIN!!!