Excellent choice. They have been the hardest working kit on my truck for 2 years now!Unboxed some WKOR sliders. As soon as I remove AHC, then I can go forward with the installation. I like what I see.
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Excellent choice. They have been the hardest working kit on my truck for 2 years now!Unboxed some WKOR sliders. As soon as I remove AHC, then I can go forward with the installation. I like what I see.
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FYI the autoparts stores typically rent the tools and I know for a fact O'Reilly's carries the inner tool set #67178. Might help you out.Inner and outer tie rod on the driver side following the tips from inner tierod replacement 1hr step by step no pictures 1 bannana. I managed with a handful of large channel locks and a pipe wrench, but I probably won't do the job again without the proper tool for the inners.
Tomorrow...the passenger side (still without the proper tool). Then steaks, because turkey sucks
I have been looking for some. Where did you buy it?
Looks excellent Jimmy!Finished off my 4x4Labs rear bumper build and damn it looks good! So happy with it! Matches my sliders and front bumper so well. Look at all that clearance!!
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Things I used:
Miller 211 welder: Amazon.com
ColorRite Aerosol Toyota 1E9 Galactic Grey Pearl Metallic + clearcoat: https://amzn.to/3l0num4
Seymour Truck Bed Liner - https://amzn.to/2UWEAH1
Nilight LED Amber+White pod: https://amzn.to/374h8x9
Flat mount LED pod #ad: https://amzn.to/372bM5z
Milwaukee Hole Saw Kit: Amazon.com
FYI the autoparts stores typically rent the tools and I know for a fact O'Reilly's carries the inner tool set #67178. Might help you out.
Huh, never would have guess that. I decided to forgo inners on mine since I will just get new when I do the steering rack. Maybe you can get lucky and get a tool for the other side.Ah man, I didn't even look ahead of time. I'd read in one of the threads (I think?) that the stores didn't carry something with the 42mm. Stupid for sure.
Hope that’s not a rubberized coating....that’s a rust creator.
Here you go, obviously this is with halos off.Looks,great. Can you post more pics please (different angles) as I am on the fence on getting a set myself.
Looks great. My new rear bumper comes in next week. Have you thought about doing anything with the low hanging tail pipe? Seems to be the low point still.Finished off my 4x4Labs rear bumper build and damn it looks good! So happy with it! Matches my sliders and front bumper so well. Look at all that clearance!!
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Things I used:
Miller 211 welder: Amazon.com
ColorRite Aerosol Toyota 1E9 Galactic Grey Pearl Metallic + clearcoat: https://amzn.to/3l0num4
Seymour Truck Bed Liner - https://amzn.to/2UWEAH1
Nilight LED Amber+White pod: https://amzn.to/374h8x9
Flat mount LED pod #ad: https://amzn.to/372bM5z
Milwaukee Hole Saw Kit: Amazon.com
On my ARB rear bumper, there are a couple of plates either side of the exhaust pipe. Jimmy could weld similar protection on his bumper, although it still looks like the edge of the resonator might be the most vulnerable piece.Looks great. My new rear bumper comes in next week. Have you thought about doing anything with the low hanging tail pipe? Seems to be the low point still.
I did modify it and moved it up a couple of inches. It is way further up than it was stock so I will run it like this and if I smash it then I'll come up with something else.Looks great. My new rear bumper comes in next week. Have you thought about doing anything with the low hanging tail pipe? Seems to be the low point still.
The theory is that if your engine is running into a situation where it is having to fight detonation by retarding the ignition timing, such as driving up a mountain road with a heavy load, it would benifit from using the higher octane, slower burning fuel, by not having to retard the timing to limit the detonation. Retarding the ignition timing would negatively affect fuel mileage with the lower octane fuel. Using the higher octane fuel in that scenario would maintain "normal", not "better", mileage since no, or at least less, ignition timing change is needed. So they say: "You get better mileage with higher octane fuel". Not really, just normal. You may be getting decreased mileage, however, while using low octane if your engine has detonation issues.I guess I don’t understand why higher octane would give a higher fuel mileage. Isn’t a higher octane rating a less combustible fuel to make up for a higher compression engine?
The theory is that if your engine is running into a situation where it is having to fight detonation by retarding the ignition timing, such as driving up a mountain road with a heavy load, it would benifit from using the higher octane, slower burning fuel, by not having to retard the timing to limit the detonation. Retarding the ignition timing would negatively affect fuel mileage with the lower octane fuel. Using the higher octane fuel in that scenario would maintain "normal", not "better", mileage since no, or at least less, ignition timing change is needed. So they say: "You get better mileage with higher octane fuel". Not really, just normal. You may be getting decreased mileage, however, while using low octane if your engine has detonation issues.
That said, I've tried them all, low octane, high octane, and non-alcohol rec fuel, and get the exact same mileage with all. I do use higher octane gas whenever I leave flat Florida, though, just to help protect the engine against any possibility of detonation.