Rusty:
IMO, One of the major attractions of these conversions is to end up with an HD 7* series front end and mechanicals, and the mechanical reliability there of. The result would have much less appeal to me, if Wayne squeezed the PZ into the Prado sheetmetal. Or, heaven forbid, put HD sheetmetal on Prado mechanicals.
But I agree that you have a valid concern concerning the frame.
I realize that some are going to flame me for posting this, but they do not understand my experience and background, and that is fine. What's tends to be important on forums is post count, not real world experience, education, and qualifications.
It would be interesting to compare Wayne's result with the HZJ 79 frame, wrt cross-members on either side of the coil mounts.. Technically, for the "home shop" builder, the way Beislebub did it by adding the sheetmetal mounts to the existing Prado frame, preserves the original frame geometry and the way loads from the spring and shock mounts get distributed, and there are no questionable welds in a highly stressed area.
Wayne is going to do it the way Wayne wants to, regardless of who suggests what, and with his "seat of the pants" design and fabrication skills, will have a result that is better than 80 or 90% of the home builds.. If the frame does have issues, Wayne will man up to it, accept that his approach didn't work, fix it, put it behind him and move on - all in the space of about 5 minutes. Wayne is also going to be under his rig on a regular basis, and will be looking for signs of imminent failure.
The problem comes down the road, if/when the rig ends up in the general population, owned by somebody that doesn't understand, or the modification is copied by some snot-nosed kid that welds up the frame with a coat hanger and a couple of batteries.
Understand that I am not saying that Wayne's approach is dangerous or unsafe, just that a bunch of things have to be done correctly, in a competent fashion for the end result to be potentially successful and safe. If I was Wayne, I'd be talking Louis into coming up to view the progress of the build, and sneaking a few peaks under his rig, checking if Toyota did anything different on the later coil sprung frames vs the leaf sprung frames.
If I had to inspect and offer a professional opinion on the modification, done in a home shop, I would be looking for an approach like the one Beislebub used. That's my personal/professional opinion, and if there other licensed professional engineers, or government inspectors out there that wish to assume liability by offering up a differing opinion, that's fine too.
If anybody wishes to discuss credentials, please PM me.
Jim