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- #101
I like wrenching. I’ve rebuilt power steering pumps, installed transfer cases, removed the viscous coupler, rebuilt axles, rebuilt the front end on my Bronco, redone the suspension. Welded up a swing out rear bumper on the LC, so I know my way around tools. I’ve just never opened up an engine.If you have wrenching skills already, then you are ahead of the game. The engine is nothing more than an assembly of parts. Quite a few of them, but it's just parts at the end of the day and there are step by step instructions for assembly/removal/re-assembly in the factory service manual. I believe you can still buy a long block (entire lower end) from Toyota brand new, and it becomes more of a parts swapping exercise. Take out your engine, take it partially apart and reassemble all of it onto the new long block. Probably want to have a head job done 'while you are in there' by a competent shop, but even that would be optional.
If you just want to drive it and aren't into wrenching as a hobby in and of itself, I wouldn't tackle it. For myself, I just could not afford to drive old vehicles if I didn't wrench on them, plus I enjoy it as it's own thing.
I’ve talked to Toyota dealers, from what they told me you cant get new engines here in north america. The Land Cruiser restoration people get the short blocks from over seas, usually from the middle east or Japan. Thats why most of the rebuilds take 6 months to a year. At least thats what I was told.
I work for a construction company and our shop mechanics are keen to help. So I have the LC at the shop now, we’ll look into pulling the engine and tearing into it to see exactly what is damaged and go from there
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