I have been having too much fun to take the time to write up some of my recent mods (so they are not so recent anymore!), but here’s a start!
First up is the Front Runner Auxiliary Tank. I ordered this model from South Africa:
http://www.frontrunner.co.za/fuel-s...ank-toyota-land-cruiser-100.html#.U37S4vkhizA
It’s no longer available in the U.S. directly from F.R., nor will they ship you one directly, so I had to use some family connections.
The 61 litre tank adds 16.1 gallons to the stock capacity of 25.4 gallons, making a healthy 41.5 gallon capacity. I think I have managed to get closer to 45 gallons in there. My safe operating range at a conservative 13 mpg is 550 miles which is awesome. We can make long treks into Mexico without any worries at all (not that there isn’t great fuel access at Pemex all over MX).
I read about Kurt’s F.R. tank install here:
https://forum.ih8mud.com/threads/pr...zj100-land-cruiser.647636/page-8#post-9048738
I like the simplicity of the gravity feed tanks and not having to worry about running pumps dry, or turning off the hundy to switch tanks/gauges etc. With the gravity feed tank, the needle on the gauge stays above “Freakin’ Full” for 250 miles before it starts to drop. Also the tank does not remove the ability to carry an under-mounted spare, although the spare does shift a little lower. With a rear swing out tyre carrier I can now carry two spares which will come in handy. There is also only one filler hole.
One of the things I have been worried about with the extra tank nestled above spare tyre location is vehicle inspections around Mexico and into the US. I have been checked several times so far and it’s never come up. Recently I was at a stop and an army officer was checking the car in front of me with a fibre optic camera. He inserted it into the tank via the filler and looked into a camera. My heart dropped when I realized that if he did that to us, he would not see any gas in the aux tank (needle was now at ¾) and I would have hard time explaining why the hundy was still running! Fortunately he didn’t feel the need to look in my tank – it would have been impossible for him to navigate his camera into the main tank through the aux tank. The fill pipe travels from the filler to the aux tank. Then an outlet form the aux tank goes on to feed the main tank – in a series fashion. The vent tubes work in parallel but the filler is daisy-chained.
Onto the install. First of all I did follow the instructions – mostly!
Here: http://www.frontrunner.co.za/media/pdf/FTTL001/F_FTTL001.pdf
I even laid out all the parts to make sure I had them all:
Some views of the tank. It has lots of “cut-outs” for plumbing, spare tyre mounts and to fit up against the body.
First steps are to remove all the spare tyre winch and mounting/stabilizing brackets. Pretty straight forward. A harder part for me was getting the rubber exhaust and muffler hangers off so the exhaust stuff could be shifted but in the end they came loose without having to cut them. I levered them off with a great big screw driver.
Here’s the empty space where the tank goes. You can see the existing fill line and vent tube in bottom left:
First up is the Front Runner Auxiliary Tank. I ordered this model from South Africa:
http://www.frontrunner.co.za/fuel-s...ank-toyota-land-cruiser-100.html#.U37S4vkhizA
It’s no longer available in the U.S. directly from F.R., nor will they ship you one directly, so I had to use some family connections.
The 61 litre tank adds 16.1 gallons to the stock capacity of 25.4 gallons, making a healthy 41.5 gallon capacity. I think I have managed to get closer to 45 gallons in there. My safe operating range at a conservative 13 mpg is 550 miles which is awesome. We can make long treks into Mexico without any worries at all (not that there isn’t great fuel access at Pemex all over MX).
I read about Kurt’s F.R. tank install here:
https://forum.ih8mud.com/threads/pr...zj100-land-cruiser.647636/page-8#post-9048738
I like the simplicity of the gravity feed tanks and not having to worry about running pumps dry, or turning off the hundy to switch tanks/gauges etc. With the gravity feed tank, the needle on the gauge stays above “Freakin’ Full” for 250 miles before it starts to drop. Also the tank does not remove the ability to carry an under-mounted spare, although the spare does shift a little lower. With a rear swing out tyre carrier I can now carry two spares which will come in handy. There is also only one filler hole.
One of the things I have been worried about with the extra tank nestled above spare tyre location is vehicle inspections around Mexico and into the US. I have been checked several times so far and it’s never come up. Recently I was at a stop and an army officer was checking the car in front of me with a fibre optic camera. He inserted it into the tank via the filler and looked into a camera. My heart dropped when I realized that if he did that to us, he would not see any gas in the aux tank (needle was now at ¾) and I would have hard time explaining why the hundy was still running! Fortunately he didn’t feel the need to look in my tank – it would have been impossible for him to navigate his camera into the main tank through the aux tank. The fill pipe travels from the filler to the aux tank. Then an outlet form the aux tank goes on to feed the main tank – in a series fashion. The vent tubes work in parallel but the filler is daisy-chained.
Onto the install. First of all I did follow the instructions – mostly!
Here: http://www.frontrunner.co.za/media/pdf/FTTL001/F_FTTL001.pdf
I even laid out all the parts to make sure I had them all:
Some views of the tank. It has lots of “cut-outs” for plumbing, spare tyre mounts and to fit up against the body.
First steps are to remove all the spare tyre winch and mounting/stabilizing brackets. Pretty straight forward. A harder part for me was getting the rubber exhaust and muffler hangers off so the exhaust stuff could be shifted but in the end they came loose without having to cut them. I levered them off with a great big screw driver.
Here’s the empty space where the tank goes. You can see the existing fill line and vent tube in bottom left: