Hey all,
I've been a lurker on ih8mud and yotatech for awhile. I've been driving Discos for 8 years and have been contemplating a jump to the Toyota world for my next rig (100 series LC - prefer a 105, but oh well). Unlike the forum banter that depicts Rovers in the shop every two weeks, mine have been, ahem, fairly/decently reliable --- thus far.
With the addition of a kid to the family, I'm looking at spending more dough on building a DD for obstacle wheeling, camping, and long distance offroad trips. My 2001 Disco II does this pretty well (1.5" OME lift, sliders), but I've been a little reluctant to spend any more on upgrades as I've been eyeing on switching to a 100 cause I'm getting the urge to try something different. I have never owned a Toyota before - or anything superbly reliable for that matter (Rovers, Jeeps, one or two other domestics).
About the max I'm willing to spend on a new rig is $19k and an initial 2-3k for mods -- which seems to go far less in the Cruiser world than the Rover world. This amounts to about 2000 a with ~100k miles. I want to go with a model that has the traction control (hence 2000+) and add the lockers later (TC front, locker rear better combo than the '99/'98 models). What kind of problems can I expect if I drive it hard for the next say 40k miles?
ARB vs Toyota E-lockers? What are your opinions and what are the price differences? Since Toyota obviously made an E-locker to fit the new 9.5" rear, one should be available. I've read that the diff in the front IFS is the same as the 80, so an E-locker should be available for that? I have front/rear airlockers on my D90, and while the compressor hasn't failed (and no air leaks), I'd be tempted to go with a electrical setup. A difference seems to be that the ARBs engage instantly while the Toyota lockers take awhile to engage?
Can anyone compare the performance of Toyota's Trac system with Rover's ETC in a difficult offroad environment - one or two tires in the air?
What's required to get 12" or 14" shocks in the rear? I saw a pic of Podvin's ride doing this. Is it just new shock mounts and removing the rear sway? Obviously the top of the springs are unretained. Is there a cone mechanism stock or added to guide the spring back into the upper perch? As an aside, I did a similar 14" shock setup on my D90.
How does the ride compare to stock with a 3" lift + 35's t-bars cranked and all? What kind of gas mileage do you 35'ers get?
What's the threshold for breaking CVs, diffs, and axle shafts? I.e. bouncing while locked on slickrock?
How often do you have to get alignments done because of wheeling? Does the IFS ever hang you up? Do any of you guys have front solid axle envy while offroad? (onroad is a nobrainer)
What is parts availability like at most the dealerships/NAPA, obviously I would go with someone like CDan if I have a breakdown at home?
Oh yeah, and more importantly, for those of you that have wheeled with comparable Discoverys, what are your unbiased (heh) opinions? I've already checked out expeditionswest writeups and they seem quite good and objective. My current thinking is I'd be taking a step up in reliability even with a higher mileage Toyota, but taking a step down in offroad performance. Feel free to convince me otherwise on the latter.
Has anyone completed something like Carnage Canyon or Holy Cross in a 100?
I've been a lurker on ih8mud and yotatech for awhile. I've been driving Discos for 8 years and have been contemplating a jump to the Toyota world for my next rig (100 series LC - prefer a 105, but oh well). Unlike the forum banter that depicts Rovers in the shop every two weeks, mine have been, ahem, fairly/decently reliable --- thus far.

With the addition of a kid to the family, I'm looking at spending more dough on building a DD for obstacle wheeling, camping, and long distance offroad trips. My 2001 Disco II does this pretty well (1.5" OME lift, sliders), but I've been a little reluctant to spend any more on upgrades as I've been eyeing on switching to a 100 cause I'm getting the urge to try something different. I have never owned a Toyota before - or anything superbly reliable for that matter (Rovers, Jeeps, one or two other domestics).
About the max I'm willing to spend on a new rig is $19k and an initial 2-3k for mods -- which seems to go far less in the Cruiser world than the Rover world. This amounts to about 2000 a with ~100k miles. I want to go with a model that has the traction control (hence 2000+) and add the lockers later (TC front, locker rear better combo than the '99/'98 models). What kind of problems can I expect if I drive it hard for the next say 40k miles?
ARB vs Toyota E-lockers? What are your opinions and what are the price differences? Since Toyota obviously made an E-locker to fit the new 9.5" rear, one should be available. I've read that the diff in the front IFS is the same as the 80, so an E-locker should be available for that? I have front/rear airlockers on my D90, and while the compressor hasn't failed (and no air leaks), I'd be tempted to go with a electrical setup. A difference seems to be that the ARBs engage instantly while the Toyota lockers take awhile to engage?
Can anyone compare the performance of Toyota's Trac system with Rover's ETC in a difficult offroad environment - one or two tires in the air?
What's required to get 12" or 14" shocks in the rear? I saw a pic of Podvin's ride doing this. Is it just new shock mounts and removing the rear sway? Obviously the top of the springs are unretained. Is there a cone mechanism stock or added to guide the spring back into the upper perch? As an aside, I did a similar 14" shock setup on my D90.
How does the ride compare to stock with a 3" lift + 35's t-bars cranked and all? What kind of gas mileage do you 35'ers get?
What's the threshold for breaking CVs, diffs, and axle shafts? I.e. bouncing while locked on slickrock?
How often do you have to get alignments done because of wheeling? Does the IFS ever hang you up? Do any of you guys have front solid axle envy while offroad? (onroad is a nobrainer)
What is parts availability like at most the dealerships/NAPA, obviously I would go with someone like CDan if I have a breakdown at home?
Oh yeah, and more importantly, for those of you that have wheeled with comparable Discoverys, what are your unbiased (heh) opinions? I've already checked out expeditionswest writeups and they seem quite good and objective. My current thinking is I'd be taking a step up in reliability even with a higher mileage Toyota, but taking a step down in offroad performance. Feel free to convince me otherwise on the latter.

Has anyone completed something like Carnage Canyon or Holy Cross in a 100?
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