SAS FJ60 with axle housing flip and front shackle for my 2001 Tacoma
#42
This is the pass. side prepared and ready for the ZUK plate. I decided on a moderate plate but still
worth the effort and that is to plate it with 4" x 5/16" flatstock....roughly 44 inches worth. That hump
visible near the cab body mount is no longer. It is now somewhat "level" with the help of a flame and
a big hammer. The flatstock will not stick out.
worth the effort and that is to plate it with 4" x 5/16" flatstock....roughly 44 inches worth. That hump
visible near the cab body mount is no longer. It is now somewhat "level" with the help of a flame and
a big hammer. The flatstock will not stick out.
Last edited by ZUK; 10-23-2017 at 10:11 AM.
#44
Gonna look even smoother with this 4" x 5/16" thick flat-stock on the whole front of the frame rail
The back piece of steel had to have the torch to heat it up so the c-clamps would conform the plate to the curve.
The back piece of steel had to have the torch to heat it up so the c-clamps would conform the plate to the curve.
Last edited by ZUK; 10-23-2017 at 10:12 AM.
#48
I don't think it is.....I might be the first as I have never ran across a build with anybody doing this. It's a piece of 4" wide flatstock about 44" long.....and it appears to really do a beefing up job on the frontal frame. 2 reasons I can justify it.......it protects my investment meaning I can do a frontal collision with a car....or even an SUV and likely come out with no damage and drive off with no damage (that would really confuse the cop taking the report as they know how smashed up all light trucks end up being) and number 2----I can drill/tap/mount my steering box directly to the outside frame rail. (no drilling thru the frame and using 3 sleeves. )
The radiator I am using (Spectra CU1778 fits 95-04 Toyota Tacoma) also appears to be an uncommon choice but it seems like it should be the preferred choice due to being flush with the bottom of the frame rails.
I was just out in the shop grinding the high spots on some of the welds. No pics yet to show.
The radiator I am using (Spectra CU1778 fits 95-04 Toyota Tacoma) also appears to be an uncommon choice but it seems like it should be the preferred choice due to being flush with the bottom of the frame rails.
I was just out in the shop grinding the high spots on some of the welds. No pics yet to show.
Last edited by ZUK; 11-26-2014 at 03:12 PM.
#54
The thickness is my 5/16" plate is sufficient to drill/tap the plate itself for direct bolt up of the box with a fine thread 1/2" bolts....grade 5 or grade 8. The common problem of the older SAS trucks where the frame cracks due to the steering left/right stresses won't happen on this one because of this plate.
I probably mentioned this already but the front of the Taco frames are very thin.....and dimensioned smaller and smaller the closer you get to the frame end. The metal is thin...roughly .110" thickness....the frame end is a tiny 2 x 3" and gradually gets wider and taller until it's 2.75" wide x 5.25" tall near the cab body mount. A little beef on the frontal section like I did it seems like a good idea.
I cut off the very frontal body mount to get a solid piece of plate right up to the frame tip....then I re-attached the stock body mount. The 2x4x1/4" thick piece of frontal bumper/cross-brace complements the strength of the 5/16" x 4" plate.
Last edited by ZUK; 09-10-2015 at 08:01 AM.
#56
32mm nut wizzed right off....factory pitman arm wizzed right off with the electric impact....the
ridiculously tight high pressure metal line wizzed right off.
Clamped in place to see what it will look like.....I know it will be closer to the front....after I trim the
sheet metal.
ridiculously tight high pressure metal line wizzed right off.
Clamped in place to see what it will look like.....I know it will be closer to the front....after I trim the
sheet metal.
Last edited by ZUK; 10-23-2017 at 10:14 AM.
#58
The upper sector is from my original factory IFS "rack and pinion" ....really is of no use for this project.
That's the plastic factory cover....probably can easily re-use that to cover the firewall hole. The
lower sector is one that I purchased on Ebay....30 bucks.
Looking up into the firewall hole from the steering box's point of view.
Another shot from the same approximate vantage point.
Shot from inside the cab.
With the sector shaft splined together this is about what I will have.....
In the process of now hanging the leaf packs.....working on the fixed rear mounts. It's a little
trickier for the rear mounts....they are inboard of the frame a little bit.
A local buddy of mine (Craig) thinks I might have a ton more lift than I think I'm gonna get with these
4" lift springs....and I might have to go with 37" tires just to make it look normal. Curious what its
gonna look like when I put some weight on those packs.
That's the plastic factory cover....probably can easily re-use that to cover the firewall hole. The
lower sector is one that I purchased on Ebay....30 bucks.
Looking up into the firewall hole from the steering box's point of view.
Another shot from the same approximate vantage point.
Shot from inside the cab.
With the sector shaft splined together this is about what I will have.....
In the process of now hanging the leaf packs.....working on the fixed rear mounts. It's a little
trickier for the rear mounts....they are inboard of the frame a little bit.
A local buddy of mine (Craig) thinks I might have a ton more lift than I think I'm gonna get with these
4" lift springs....and I might have to go with 37" tires just to make it look normal. Curious what its
gonna look like when I put some weight on those packs.
Last edited by ZUK; 10-23-2017 at 10:19 AM.
#60
Now to move the axle BACK 2 inches It's too far forward
This very easy to do because the rear fixed mounts are not so "fixed" and just clamped in place.
Then to tweak some leafpack mounts on the housing and weld it semi-permanent.
Last edited by ZUK; 10-23-2017 at 10:22 AM.