Jump to content

Bryan B

Toyota Advanced Member
  • Posts

    88
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Bryan B

  1. got a 89 that needs a new radio, just may go for this, thanks for the info.

    I am not a "Audiophile" and I dont see spending hundreds on a car stereo, I do like music however, with that said this is great upgrade for cheap with all the gizmos/ add ons of high dollar stereo that also just plugs right in to your factory harness.

    the sound is very very good too, they have many internal functions- just search T1807,1808,1809 and programming or functions.

  2. okay this isnt of my own doing but it has been done numerous times to 4Runners and other Toyota trucks on other forums I belong to but I havent seen it anywhere on this forum for anyone.

    the Scion (and later model toyotas) stereo is a plug and play upgrade, even the nav. unit in later model Toyots camrys etc will work. they are all double DIN size and fit with a little filing or dremel work.

    the scion 1807, 1808, 1809 are sat. ready and all sorts of new technology I wont list (if interested look the model numbers up)

    being a "factory" head unit most places sell them for nothing at all (all day long on car part.com for under 100) and an added bonus is no one hardly ever steals factory style headunits anymore.

    can someone post up images of the1807-1808-1809, my computer wont let me save pics right now for some odd reason.

    these are great upgrades on the cheap, many functions and sound parameters- when scrolling through the XB, TC and Xa- shosse XB for best sound depth in your cabs.

    Sat. ready and Ipod plug in capable plus features I havent listed for most all the models.

    some of you will need to unplug your factory amp (behind passenger side glove box) if your vehicle has one, most bare bones trucks didnt, its the 4runners I have found the amps in.

    I will post up pics of one in my 92 4Runner dash (same exact dash as your 89-95 trucks) I used an 1807

  3. Thanks WME,

    I decided against Adapter Kings as they had fine print saying the adapters were for "show" only.

    I just found a company that makes roadworthy ones and they have the toyota config already to go as a two piece adapter.

    they are sending me a quote; will report back.

    I was going to say there is a company out there that makes the Toyota ones and already have the specs. http://customcommercialwheel.com/ AT6714 is the part # you want

  4. I picked up a sheet of polystyrene (plastic) and used a 3 inch hole saw to make a 3" disk to mount the brass ring for the horn from the original steering wheel and then mount it to the new wheels metal neck (I used plastic because otherwise it would ground out and the horn would always sound) drilled 3 holes to mount the ring with rivets then 2 holes through the plastic into the wheel itself to mount it. that was attached with rivets as well.

    2 more small 1/16 inch deep holes for the 'blinker off' collar to spin with the wheel and done, as I said before there is a gap- this can be solved a couple of ways 1. use a thin wall aluminum "collar" about an inch wide with a mount to hide the gap or live with it. 2. most of you wont be swapping to a 2.7 or newer engine with cruise control or you can just add the ring to the column plastic.

    I am looking at mounting in later model (84-88 and 89-95) to see what may be needed but from what I can tell they are more compatible than an early 79-83 (depth and CC switches)

  5. My 83 steering wheel left alot to be desired when driving short or long distances, it was hard and small diameter (wheel grip area itself not overall size) and beginning to crack in places on the plastic.

    While I was at my friends tow yard I noticed a Rav4 that was getting scrapped so I happen to see the steering wheel was a nice fat one with soft material I removed it and believe it or not it bolted right up to my steering column, same spline count and all.

    There is a small hump in my column for the high beam/blinker stem and the amount that the Rav4 wheel sets off of the column actually clears the stem fine.

    The Rav4 wheel is 1 inch smaller in diameter than the 83 (1/2inch per side) and it sticks out 3/4 of an inch closer to driver- if you can live with that it is a great upgrade.

    I have seen some ugly aftermarket steering wheels and they really make a car look like crap, this looks totally factory and you can remove the air bag out of it and still utilize the horn function. the gap between the steering wheel itself can either have a small 4.5 inch cover made or I am using the cruise control ring mounted to my column for when I do the 2.7 swap to be able to use my cruise control.

    I will post up a pic of the ring I made to use the horn still.

    post-5618-0-86782000-1331607143_thumb.jp

  6. All factory Ujoints have a grease fitting- sometimes over the years the can fall off, get covered with gunk/dirt/grease and hidden but some aftermarket Ujoints are sealed.

    Dont go with anything other than Toyota factory Ujoints either.

    Neat tidbit of info, the Toyota mini truck Ujoint is comparable to a domestic truck 1 ton Ujoint. thats been quoted many times from professionals and magazines- not my own opinion. my opinion is yes they are 1 ton strong BTW

  7. Anxiously awaiting pics...

    Why not use airbag "helpers" for the rear axle to give you lift instead of completely replacing your spring pack?

    because springs dont fail.... that would just be kind of a band aid. I can get a better spring rate with new springs to make it a bit more stable with the anti sway bars (anti roll bars, sway bars etc.)

  8. I have the frame drilled, tubing placed and welded for the spring shackle hangers under the cab, I am trying to source some factoy spring hangers to weld the frame in front and make this pretty much identical to a factory 4x4- the frame is the same 2wd/4wd its just where the IFS mounts are or the spring hangers on a 4wd are at.

    I am using a 1995 IFS 4x4 steering box, it will be a crossover steering set up which is a little safer than the factory push/pull style drag link from the factory when emergency braking, especially with the added weight of the RV.

    The axle is rebuilt, painted and currently the third member is being rebuilt with 4.88 gears in it, the R151 transmission has a gear ratio spread of

    First Gear: 4.313:1 Second Gear: 2.330:1 Third Gear: 1.436:1 Fourth Gear: 1.00:1 Fifth Gear: 0.836:1 and pretty much bullet proof. My rear springs will depend on many measurements before and after to decide what height I will have to go with over stock, a spring over axle would be way too much for the rear (7+ inches) I will use a heavier shackle as well (thicker metal) I will be ordering the rear springs from National springs- they are a little pricey but worth it.

    I will use adustable shocks because the price is right for them- name brands are almost as cheap as a normal quality shock, plus I will have to source a custom size. I will add some pics later this week

  9. I cna't count the amount of times I've had my box truck buried to the frame in mud or snow (YAY New England). I'd love to have 4WD, but I'd keep it IFS since it would never really be going off-road and I'd be using the stock wheels and tires.

    it would be nearly impossible to keep your IFS- even to add a 4x4 IFS would be nearly impossible (nearly as in a Sh+t ton of work) I dont know of anyone yet to date that has done a swap to IFS 4x4

  10. On 2012-03-08 at 0:54 PM, superchiem said:

    Yeah I have read on the 4x4 swaps on yotatech, but I also read that 2wd were different. It looks as though it would not clear, but it does so just fine. You have to bend a bracket holding the cable for the gas pedal down about 1 inch and your good to go. There is a bump in the hood that clears the motor less then a 1/4in. I'll probably switch to a hood scoop if I ever get a supercharger for it.

    IMG_0872.jpg

    Thanks for looking out though,

    Navy

    Thats the amount of clearance a 4wd has too, the engine will torque up that 1/4 inch and bump your hood under acceleration/ load and you will see it lift it a bit, you can maybe space your hood up a tiny amount to help too.

  11. Bryan,

    I just noticed you mentioned the engine compartment in a '89 is the same as 4runner. Is there a difference between my '88 and your '89 that changes this swap?

    Seamus McShank

    your engine compartment came with a V6 in some of the models (you didnt mention if yours was or not) so yes it will fit in your compartment.

    one thing to note, I use an Afco Radiator- it requires at least a 1 inch body lift, I have been in the works with Afco to make an inch and a half shorter version for 2 wheel drives and or motorhomes.

    You can source other radiators, the limiting factor is width 21-22 inches, and height of no more than 17 in motorhomes or 2wd trucks.

  12. I searched and didnt find anything on this (for the early years) does anyone know or has anyone done the later model 6 lug (for dually wheel up front) swap onto an early model (1979-1983) spindle?

    I have recently picked up a 1991 cab chassis (bad 3.O) with the required front hubs and six dually wheels so I will have the hubs, wheels and all (plus another spare rear axle!)

    I was wondering before I go and pull a side off to see myself if it has been done before on early body style trucks as well.

  13. I just liked the look of the factory scoop thats all. it wasnt going on my motorhome (mine is an 83) it is on my 4runner with the Lexus V8.

    As far as cooling goes, the only time my temps rise is when in double low range rock crawling with no airflow- the scoop doesnt flow much air at no speed, it does allow heat to escape, it is being pushed out by the engine fan though.

×
×
  • Create New...