bluecruiser
SILVER Star
I'm wondering if some driving will settle out the resistance that I'm feeling...just lifted a 13 year old vehicle from the frame...I would assume some settling will naturally occur.... Thanks for your input, Layonn...
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There's one on the rack side too...but I don't remember if there is any length adjustment to it or not.
Strange how each 100-Series apparently is somewhat unique, related to 1" BL, as I didn't have to do anything to mine and zero negative steering effect.
without this could you get your key out?I lowered the radiator ~30mm. Fabricated a 1/2" steering shaft spacer out of HDPE. And raised my ARB bumper an inch.
I took some pictures of how i slightly modified the lower radiator brackets. I will upload them later, i am beat. Basically there are two L shaped brackets, one attaches to the radiator and one to the body.I took the one for the body that was on the bottom and then put it above (instead of below) the radiator mount. There is a weld nut on the bottom you need to remove. It is very easy to attach a nut to replace that one, plenty of room to get to it from below.
Steering shaft spacer. Took some measurements and just drilled and cut it out of HDPE. If it doesn't hold up, i'll order the aluminum one from Roger Brown. I still have some tweaking to do. I did have to cut the plastic/rubber booty in order to get to the bolts. But now i do have some engine noise coming through that hole so i will be ordering a new one. But i think i will have to weld something to the nuts in order to hold them in place as you cannot get a wrench behind that boot once it is in place. Note: this is not the rubber boot you can slide upwards to view the rag joint, it is the more firm, plastic feeling one.
To raise the ARB up, you have to cut the bracket slightly. Otherwise, it is not at all possible to raise. The cut was pretty minor. Coated everything in touch up paint.
Fixed my transmission linkage so that i don't have to push forward in park. This is VERY easy to do once i figured out what the heck to do ha. If you lay under the truck on the passenger side, look upwards at the cat. Past the cat you will see a long rod with attached to a bracket with a nut. Simply loosen this nut and you will see the rod move a little bit. Then just tighten the nut back up and that is all.
Consensus is trimming the lower shroud is easier then modifying the rad mounts?
I'm tempted to do this BL, I will have to figure out raising factory bumpers front and rear...
Do you have a body lift on your rig?This thread is pretty old, but I think the consensus is to probably just do it correctly and lower the radiator instead of cutting things up. You'll also need to add a steering spacer if you're going 1". If you have the Slee dual battery tray, check for any lines near there that may not be able to stretch 1". Also, check the brake line on the PS where it clips to the UCA. This is easily an 8+ hour job and it really helps to have 2 people. One raising the body and the other checking for snags.
Do you have a body lift on your rig?
I didn't realize you had one. Do you have any issues with the body lift and everything you've got on your rig. I think I have the same size tires as you but after lifting using the ahc lift I don't have any rubbing on or off-road so I never installed the body lift. It's sitting in the garage right now. I don't have any armpit though so I didn't know if that would affect it at all.
I installed another 25mm body lift recently and was able to modify front and rear OEM bumpers to fit in the new position.I saw that someone modified the rear bumper to accommodate the body lift as far as the gap goes but has anyone done the same to the front bumper.
hey guys,I got some time today to work on the last parts of the body lift...the secret hidden bolts.
As I showed before, the top of the bolt ends in a torque drive pattern, a star. I had to figure out how to get the stud out, as I couldn't source a coupler to fit from the local Ace. Also, there's not enough room anyway for a coupler and extension stud with only a 3/4 lift.
So after three trips to Ace, I discovered the star pattern fits no common tool. I had to bite it with the visegrips and get it loose.
Here it is. The non-star pattern threaded end goes into a captive nut in the frame cross rail.
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Here is the whole assembly, nut-washer and all
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Here is what I did, I bought a 100 mm long (perfect length) M10 bolt with a 1.25 pitch. YOU NEED TWO OF THESE BOLTS IN YOUR 1/2" TO 1" BODY LIFT PARTS LIST! AND FOUR NUTS ALSO
I threaded the bolt all the way through the nut-washer and torqued it down snug so it is one piece. I then threaded two nuts up the bolt to a point where they are 3/4" longer than where the lip and end of the threads are on the factory stud. This is so the phony new stud will function like the old one and not vibrate loose. It's kind of weird, but in the end, it will function as designed by Toyota...for what ever reason.
These replacement studs are necessary for the body lift or else you are bending the bottom piece of sheet metal in your cargo area floor. These are not on the factory service manual diagrams shown thus far.
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I ran out of time tonight to reinstall these. I will get them in and get photos from below tomorrow.
Remember, I have one set of body lift pucks I can sell to someone.
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