Hi all,
I wanted to provide an update on my Front Runner Roof Rack installation. I took advantage of their Black Friday deal and ordered the roof rack and light bar along with some other accessories including the wiring harness, hi-lift jack mount, ladder brackets, Monsoon bag, and several “Stratchits” and tie down rings. Total was ~$2,150.
I commented on another thread regarding the installation of the roof rack here, so I won’t go into too much detail here, but be careful! Front Runner does not include proper directions as to mounting their racks. The factory Toyota brackets need to be removed VERY carefully and a specific way, or else you’re in for a surprise repair. @Yossarian posted a great graphic from the Toyota service manual detailing the procedure – Front Runner should have absolutely included this and would have saved me a great deal of time!
Overall the rack is made very well, and it’s one of the best looking and functional racks out there with its slotted design and movable tie-down points. The good part is that the rack is very functional and the combination of the stratchits with movable tie down rings has come in quite handy (I buy a lot of wood for woodworking projects). The monsoon bag is nifty, too.
Now comes the bad part – the light bar installation
. I bought this rack as I liked the look of installing the light bar under the rack itself in lieu of the wind deflectors. So, I get all the mounts installed including the rock guard, and guess what? It doesn’t fit
. The guard blocks the sunroof’s operation. After contacting Front Runner support, I informed them that their specifications – both in the manual and online – are wrong.
The light bar actually requires 95 mm of installation clearance under the rack, not the 90 mm as stated. Apparently, the old guard design was flat and fit within the 90mm specified, but the new guard has a bend in it which extends the height requirement.
I inquired with Front Runner support if they were able to either send a replacement guard or modify the mount such that it would work, to which they replied they will be “adjusting the specs on the light bar instructions, but not making any changes to the mounting system of the 200-series rack.” Really? So they acknowledge this is an issue, but instead of making their products better, they opt to just change the specifications ex post facto. That’s not my idea of a solid company that cares about the quality of their products and customer satisfaction.
Now I am left with the only remaining option to install the light bar on the front using the alternative mounting brackets – not ideal and not what I wanted. I perform this modified installation and then come to find out another issue – when front mounted, the light bar extends above the roof rack line by about 5mm, such that if you have a long object on the roof – like plywood boards – they will be resting on the light!
All around this is just poor design and could have EASILY been rectified with engineering the brackets slightly differently. This would be readily apparent on any CAD drawing. According to support, Front Runner has zero interest in modifying the front mount bracket either.
Now onto the final issue, I go to connect the wiring harness which I just spent hours running neatly from the battery through my power distribution block, grounding block, mounting the relay, puncturing and sealing the firewall gasket, installing the switch, and running the cable up the A-pillar windshield molding, only to have the connector (which I believe is an Amphenol ATP connector) literally fall off. No joke, the thing was held on from the wiring harness side with 1/32” wire stripped and no solder or heatshrink.
I tried to get the Amphenol connector open to re-solder, however cannot for some reason, so I requested Front Runner to ship a new connector. What did they send me? A new pigtail – the one I obviously already have from the light bar purchase itself (the wiring harness, optionally purchased, has its own).
Also, as the pigtail coming off the light bar is already 12” or so, now I’ll have an extra 12” of pigtail on top of my roof to hide, not to mention solder the leads onto the existing harness – not the clean install I was hoping for (yes, I do own a pair of wire cutters, but that's not the point
). Otherwise I could spend another several hours running the wiring harness again, which was siliconed (is that a word?) in from water ingress. I asked Front Runner to cover the installation cost, to which they refused, so I’m on the hook for re-installing their defective cable. Again, no concern given to the fact their wiring harness connectors were loosely crimped on and bound to fail. 
I guess the bottom line is that I’m not happy after spending this much money for everything to have to use the front-mount option and risk damage to the light caused by objects resting on top of it, and the lack of concern by Front Runner for their lack of proper measurements. They sent me a pigtail I already had, and that’s the extent of the support I received (great customer service, eh?
). I will be finding the ATP04-2P connector (which I had to research to figure out what it was as Front Runner couldn’t answer that) on my own and fixing this the right way.
Finally, and not to add fuel to the fire, but I do wish the hi-lift jack had a better, more integrated locking system. I ran an adjustable cable lock through the lock down ring, through the jack itself, and then around the rack. This works, but it would be much cleaner to have an integrated locking mechanism.
I hope this review assists others in making the determination if the Front Runner rack is the right product for them. I know what I'll be doing this weekend...

In addition, I will be posting two more reviews this weekend after I finish my Air-On-Board "oem look" switch installation and also a special interior light LED upgrade, so look for both of those coming soon!
Now, here she sits in in all her glory!

I wanted to provide an update on my Front Runner Roof Rack installation. I took advantage of their Black Friday deal and ordered the roof rack and light bar along with some other accessories including the wiring harness, hi-lift jack mount, ladder brackets, Monsoon bag, and several “Stratchits” and tie down rings. Total was ~$2,150.
I commented on another thread regarding the installation of the roof rack here, so I won’t go into too much detail here, but be careful! Front Runner does not include proper directions as to mounting their racks. The factory Toyota brackets need to be removed VERY carefully and a specific way, or else you’re in for a surprise repair. @Yossarian posted a great graphic from the Toyota service manual detailing the procedure – Front Runner should have absolutely included this and would have saved me a great deal of time!
Overall the rack is made very well, and it’s one of the best looking and functional racks out there with its slotted design and movable tie-down points. The good part is that the rack is very functional and the combination of the stratchits with movable tie down rings has come in quite handy (I buy a lot of wood for woodworking projects). The monsoon bag is nifty, too.
Now comes the bad part – the light bar installation




The light bar actually requires 95 mm of installation clearance under the rack, not the 90 mm as stated. Apparently, the old guard design was flat and fit within the 90mm specified, but the new guard has a bend in it which extends the height requirement.


I inquired with Front Runner support if they were able to either send a replacement guard or modify the mount such that it would work, to which they replied they will be “adjusting the specs on the light bar instructions, but not making any changes to the mounting system of the 200-series rack.” Really? So they acknowledge this is an issue, but instead of making their products better, they opt to just change the specifications ex post facto. That’s not my idea of a solid company that cares about the quality of their products and customer satisfaction.

Now I am left with the only remaining option to install the light bar on the front using the alternative mounting brackets – not ideal and not what I wanted. I perform this modified installation and then come to find out another issue – when front mounted, the light bar extends above the roof rack line by about 5mm, such that if you have a long object on the roof – like plywood boards – they will be resting on the light!


All around this is just poor design and could have EASILY been rectified with engineering the brackets slightly differently. This would be readily apparent on any CAD drawing. According to support, Front Runner has zero interest in modifying the front mount bracket either.
Now onto the final issue, I go to connect the wiring harness which I just spent hours running neatly from the battery through my power distribution block, grounding block, mounting the relay, puncturing and sealing the firewall gasket, installing the switch, and running the cable up the A-pillar windshield molding, only to have the connector (which I believe is an Amphenol ATP connector) literally fall off. No joke, the thing was held on from the wiring harness side with 1/32” wire stripped and no solder or heatshrink.


I tried to get the Amphenol connector open to re-solder, however cannot for some reason, so I requested Front Runner to ship a new connector. What did they send me? A new pigtail – the one I obviously already have from the light bar purchase itself (the wiring harness, optionally purchased, has its own).

Also, as the pigtail coming off the light bar is already 12” or so, now I’ll have an extra 12” of pigtail on top of my roof to hide, not to mention solder the leads onto the existing harness – not the clean install I was hoping for (yes, I do own a pair of wire cutters, but that's not the point


I guess the bottom line is that I’m not happy after spending this much money for everything to have to use the front-mount option and risk damage to the light caused by objects resting on top of it, and the lack of concern by Front Runner for their lack of proper measurements. They sent me a pigtail I already had, and that’s the extent of the support I received (great customer service, eh?

Finally, and not to add fuel to the fire, but I do wish the hi-lift jack had a better, more integrated locking system. I ran an adjustable cable lock through the lock down ring, through the jack itself, and then around the rack. This works, but it would be much cleaner to have an integrated locking mechanism.
I hope this review assists others in making the determination if the Front Runner rack is the right product for them. I know what I'll be doing this weekend...



In addition, I will be posting two more reviews this weekend after I finish my Air-On-Board "oem look" switch installation and also a special interior light LED upgrade, so look for both of those coming soon!
Now, here she sits in in all her glory!


Last edited: