Chello;1775514 said:
Looking good mate, alot of work, will all be worth it in the end
Thanks man, it definitely will be.
You guys are overdue for an update. I assure you I haven't given up on the project, just been working hard, and now that the sun ditches me around 4 PM, I haven't been as good about taking progress pics. That said, lets get this show on the road.
Day 13
Stripped down the rear axle and discovered I had a broken leaf spring. Picked up John R leaf springs off ebay. They are are a spring company from the midwest. I had never heard of them but I got them for $103.75 each with free shipping, so I took the risk, we'll see how they do.
Got the axle painted, unfortunately it was a little too cold and the paint didnt set up perfectly, but perfect isnt attainable with the limited resources I have.
About the Eastwood Rust Encapsulator paint, while I really like it, you cannot use it below 65*F, as the eastwood guy told me after the fact. That should have been printed on the label guys!
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Day 14
Beautiful day, got some hardcore painting done. Everything I painted except the gas tank set up fairly well. Not the end of the world, I can always replace it, as the tank had some pin holes in the top.
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Day 15
Mounted up the rear axle, Steering components and one of the FL wheel/suspension. Forgot to get a pic of the rear axle.
I went with Raybestos professional grade balljoints. While they seem to be high quality, the hardware included is not. They use M16 x 1.50 nylock nuts instead of castle nuts. One of these stripped out on me, and I initially thought it was my fault. Then when mounting the upper balljoints all of the mounting nuts stripped out on me, before reaching the TSRM reccomended 25 lbs/ft.
Rock auto exchanged the balljoint with stripped nylock, as I could not find a M16 x 1.50 anywhere without buying a box of 25 for $80-100. I bought class 8 nuts for the upper control arm mounts, but I was forced to used the Nylock nuts on the balljoint studs, as I had no alternatives. You cannot use a castle nut, as there is no hole drilled for a cotter pin. I didnt want to drill a hole, fearing of weakening the stud, but now that I think about it the part that you would drill doesnt see any real load, so you probably could safely drill it. Food for thought in the Raybestos pro VS moog quality debate.
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Day 16
Installed the FR suspension/wheel. The front brakes had siezed up and the wheels would not spin. In addition to this the aluminum rims had siezed to the steel hubs so badly, that if this was a running vehicle, I could have removed all the lug nuts then driven it without loosing a wheel.
I tried numerous methods to remove the wheel. The method that worked was to smash the wheel repeatedly with a 8ft concrete filled lolly column that had to have weighed at least 150 lbs. I think that it worked because the inertia of such a heavy item, is able to strike the wheel and still have some force behind it after the rubber tire deflects. Despite being a big guy, swinging that thing around was quite an exhausting task.
After I got the wheels off, I freed up the brakes, as I really dont have the scratch to replace all the brake components right now. That will be done later Replacing everything including wheel bearings and backing plates from Toyota.
I clearanced the hub hole in the rims and lathered the hub up really good with anti sieze so hopefully I wont have to deal with stuck wheels ever again.
These pictures were taken today, so chronologicly they dont make sense as you can see things I havent done until today.
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Day 17 aka today
Plumbed all of the brake lines on the frame. The nicopp (nickel copper alloy, also known as cunnifer) were incredibly easy to work with. While I cant speak for the longevity of it, I would reccomend it to anyone. Really happy with the results of this. Also got the gas tank and fuel lines mounted up.
If you're interested to do everything I needed three 25 ft rolls for this and the brake/clutch lines in the engine bay, so you're looking at about $150 in materials. I did this with a tubing cutter, craftsman flaring kit, and eastwood bending plyers. You can get all 3 of these tools for about $100 total. So you're looking at about $250 for the job, and you will have the tools and some left over tubing for your next job, your lines will never rust, and you probably only spent a quarter of what it would cost to get all the lines from toyota.
The red stuff on the tube nuts is just grease I rubbed on them to keep or at least slow them from rusting.
Took advantage of the warm day and painted a couple parts, somehow I forgot about the sway bar before, and I had skipped the crossmember because I had plans of replacing it with a budbuilt unit, but its not in the budget now, so I slapped some paint on it for the time being.