A history of Toyota's from the past I have owned.
1992 2nd Gen 30K miles sold to buy pickup. I will always regret selling this truck. good bye sweet prince.\
1996 T100 - 17 years and put 220K before MN salt ate the frame into multiple chunks.
2002 3rd gen black SR5 after 10 years sold this tuck last year with 150K miles because it was falling apart, again due to salt.
2017 purchased 2000 limited desert dune metallic, of EBAY in Dallas Forth Worth area, flew from MN to Dallas and drove it back to MN. 100% rust free and this truck will never ever be driven in the salt. EVER!
Maintenance
did Timing Belt Kit, and all that extra stuff... so much fun.
Timing belt, Koyo and NSK Idlers, Cam seals,Crank seal,Tensioner,Thermostat/Gasket,Serpentine Belts,Water pump/Gasket https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...?ie=UTF8&psc=1
started off Standard looking with some new BFG Ko2, also did the grille mod because my god why did this truck not come with that grille in the first place. also tried running the russian headlights... they were really cheap and I ended up taking them off. still have them in a box if somebody is looking 4 them. will sell them for cheap.
I also attempted to do the LED dash light deal... was way to bright for me. I ended up just getting OEM bulbs and pulling off the green cover.
Stage 1 Icon with target of 2.5" of lift and OME springs 906
I put a couple of thousand miles on this setup but after I put my bumpers on the backend compressed a ton. this show the original rear coils, the OME and the new Toytec 3" I finally ended up with, giving a bit of rake but I like me some rake.
Other Suspension work.
I replaced all the rear control arms and replaced all the old old nuts/bolts with new OEM toyota. I used blue lock and also marked the bolts so I can tell if they are working lose while out on adventure.
I went with both front and rear 4x innovations bumpers
I sandblasted them and had them hot dip galvanized, this has worked out great and the galvanized surface is really tough and so far they have held up without a problem. even a small fender bender was nothing to the galvanized surface. I also wanted to add... I replaced all my body mounts because I was having clearance issues on the pinch welds where the bumper wraps around. my old body mounts were very compressed and the new mounts helped solve that issue. I also added 1 large washer between the bumper mounting points on the frame, this gave me an added 1/16" of clearance.
I decided since MN gets kind of cold I would run my external trans cooler in series. it goes through the external cooler first then radiator and back to transmission. Even loaded down with gear and doing 70 MPH my temps run 170-180. Very happy with the setup.
it is a larger cooler than most people run but with heavy bumpers, roof rack, tent, and full armor, dynamat ... my truck is not getting any lighter. so having extra cooling capacity in my mind was worth the larger size.
I picked up a headliner off a 1999 SR5 and it matched in size and pattern. going to run a test to see if I can glue new fabric to it and make some mistakes.
turned out pretty well... so now I'm going to try for a keeper including the sunroof slider. got some samples from auto interiors. I did new carpet from them as well with the sandstone color so... will try to match as well as I can.
stripped the sunroof cover, now just need some new fabric and done!
I have also been snapping up all the oak handles off you pick-ums when I find nice ones. I want to add some handles... no idea why I just want more handles on everything
Hello nutserts, where you have you been all my life?
I trimmed some holes with a rasp, jig saw so the handles would sit down into the rear panel. wanted it to look like OEM if possible. ended up having to cut a couple of small spacers because of course there is some room behind the panel.
super happy how it turned out... now I just need to do the other side and come up with some netting for a fishing pole holder thing, or attic netting.
yes, both inner and outer with needle bearings. they are ready to be pressed, it's the reason I took the big $ hit and got them new. attempting to source those bushings and needle bearings... and torquing to spec. not hard but, pretty sure you need special tools for doing it.
I should also mention if you have never hot dipped things before, you have to protect any threads and drill out any closed tubes. closed areas can explode or crack, you will have to re-tap any threads to clean them up. the galvanizing goes everywhere, part of the reason it works well for rust proofing. I would do it again, it's been great so far.
Carpet has been done before but one thing I decided to do... will see how it works out.
these hardboard backs on the rear seats were all chewed up on mine.
I wanted to be able to remove the back seats all the way from time to time. the carpet is sewn into those back seat covers. I trimmed them off my carpet. so mine will be stand alone.
glue the the 2 existing chewed up seat backs into one piece because they are so sketchy
trace out the pattern on the new hardboard
cut them out rough on the bandsaw, then double stick tape them togeather because they are mirror images.
now put them all together with double stick tape
use a pattern bit to cut them exactly like the pattern and drill out those little keyhole areas and you have 100% brand new prefect duplicates ready for new carpet. and of course new fasteners, have to pay the toyota god.
passenger side done
Installed, this way I can take the back seats out without having the rear carpet all one piece. and as an added bonus things can hide in the gap I created.