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Because Baja!

Discussion in '2nd Gen. Tacomas (2005-2015)' started by Brandon###, May 10, 2013.

  1. Aug 1, 2013 at 2:46 PM
    #261
    gretch6364

    gretch6364 Active Member

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    I agree and am probably just going to do it. Icon AAL, don't put the overload back in. Also, I am adding a rear bumper that is 10lbs more then stock plus skids and sliders. 99% of the time I am offroad there will be camping gear and more then one full grown male in the truck. Will probable be sitting much lower anyhow, and the shocks have the extra travel, and they kept the stock length bump stops on the truck.
     
  2. Aug 3, 2013 at 9:59 PM
    #262
    ReddingtonTRD

    ReddingtonTRD Well-Known Member

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    2013 TX Baja, Black 6-speed
    Build: 2013 Tacoma TX Baja Access Cab 6-Speed Manual *denotes stock feature for Baja Exterior/Performance *TX Baja Series Badging (small sticker--no large “Baja”), Red TRD badge on tailgate Billet 14” antenna Hitch cap Softopper with interchangeable mesh/solid rear doors, doggie door at cab, and dust bag *TRD Cat-back exhaust DeMello Bolt-On Hybrid Rock Sliders TRD front aluminum skid plate *TRD Gun Metal Gray Beadlock Style Wheels *BFG A/T 265/70/16 LED plates lights (thx CSJumper) Interior/Performance *Toyota HD Flooring throughout cab...entirely weatherproof. No carpeting TRD Quickshifter TRD Shift knob, MOMO knob, *Stock leather knob Uniden Radio/Walkies LED Replacement Bulbs (CS…again) Suspension *Front 3” TRD racing coils *60mm HD Bilstein (TRD custom valved in San Antonio) front shocks. Similar to 9100/9300s w/ bumpstop *Modified bumpstops by TRD in San Antonio *50mm Bilstein (TRD custom valved by TRD in San Antonio) *Tuned 3 leaf + overlo
    Well said, Brandon! I mentioned this before, but I completely agree. This is my 6th Toyota pickup and I have to say, after having several off-roads, this setup by far (out of the box), handles much better that my OR by maintaining the geometry of the ride. The notorious bouncing around on washboards is eliminated, thus keeping the truck on the trail, momentum maintained, and moving forward. The articulation is fantastic and it provides enough lift to get the job done. Throw in better tires, nice (although faux beadlock) wheels, cat-back exhaust, extended brake lines, and of course the coil overs and massive shocks, it's a terrific package, not to mentioned fully-warrantied. I paid about $1500 more on my 13 baja than my 12 OR.
     
  3. Aug 4, 2013 at 9:49 AM
    #263
    monkeyface

    monkeyface Douchebag, or just douche if we're friends

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    I decided to go ahead and get this. Why you ask, MWOAP, jandrews? Because of the extended length of the shocks. 25" front and 27" rear is superior to the "OEM Replacement" kits offered by ICON, King, Fox, OME. Not wanting buyers regret I did many hours of research here on the awesome TW in the Suspension section, TTORA, browsing vendor sites like Toytec, Downsouth, SDHQ, checking tech specs on manufacturers sites. What I found was:

    **King - front 22", rear 24". $2300.

    **ICON Stage I - couldn't get hard specs, but I think they're in the same range as King, 22"/24". Add remote res for the rear shocks for the ICON Stage I and it's $1800.
    **Fox - front 22", rear 24". $1500.

    **OME - apx. 22-23" both front and rear. $800.

    I'm sure they're all great kits, but better? I'm doubtful. It's not like Bilstein, Eibach and TRD are a bunch of bums that slapped together a kit on a weekend outing. Perfect for my needs since I'm not gonna buy new 16x8 wheels so I can put 285's on. That would be another $800, no way. 285's are only gonna get me 1.2" extra ground clearance over 265/75's, and would require new UCA's most likely (and new UCA's are *required* by King and ICON if you want extended length coilovers - which STILL may not get me to 25" like the Baja does). New UCA's are an additional $500 over the prices I listed above.

    Despite 650h1's post that you can't get full travel with the Baja coilovers unless you get aftermarket UCA's, I'm thinking I will.

    Now, one could get custom setups from King, ICON, Fox that give you the extended length, but that gets even pricier than the OEM Replacement Kits. What I'm seeing is this Baja kit is the best bang for the buck.

    I'm not gonna sink a bunch of money into the truck just so I can look cool with 3" of lift and 285's. What I want is an effective off-roader to get me over rocky Colorado roads and fast desert running in Utah. For that, wheel travel is the big deal, as well as strong shocks. And what does the kit provide? Wheel travel and strong shocks. For less $$$ than King, ICON, Fox.
     
  4. Aug 4, 2013 at 10:52 AM
    #264
    Lord Helmet

    Lord Helmet Prepare To Attack

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    subscribed :thumbsup:
     
  5. Aug 7, 2013 at 5:25 PM
    #265
    monkeyface

    monkeyface Douchebag, or just douche if we're friends

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    Alright. Got the kit delivered today. Measurements:

    Front shocks - body 12", 2.5" diameter, extended length 22", travel unkown (can't compress them).

    Rear shocks - body 12", 2.0" diameter, extended length 24", travel ~10".

    Coils - 14", 3" ID.

    So my estimated extended lengths posted above were way off. I somehow had it my head they were 25" and 27". Ouch, miscalculation. See the attachment and judge for yourself the lengths.

    Anyhow, the shocks are roughly the same as ICON, King, Fox "OEM Replacement Kits". Less $$$ than ICON and King, about the same as Fox. More $$$ than Old Man Emu.

    baja.shocks.length.jpg
     
  6. Aug 10, 2013 at 2:26 PM
    #266
    monkeyface

    monkeyface Douchebag, or just douche if we're friends

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    Well, kit went in Thursday (along with the 4-piece BudBuilt skids), new BFG TA KO 265/75/16's on Friday, first offroad trip today. Took it up to Rollins Pass http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rollins_Pass . There's another more difficult road, the Boulder Wagon Road, didn't try it, not sure how far it goes before the closure point. http://www.risingsun4x4club.org/forum2/showthread.php?t=19943&page=2

    So obviously it is a much stiffer ride on the freeway, it can get pretty busy because of the stiff compression nature of both the front coils and all four shocks. I noticed during the install the rear shocks are very stiff to compress compared to stock. The stock rears I could compress with one hand to get them off (18k miles on the stocks). The new ones it took two hands to compress them, and they have a quick rebound. The new fronts I couldn't compress by hand even a millimeter. The stock fronts were easily compressed.

    So I'm guessing the valving is set up for stiff compression and quick rebound on all four corners, which one would expect for a Baja setup I guess. On the rocky road (literally billions of small-medium sized rocks for 12 miles) it was fine but of course a lot of jarring because again the stiff compression nature of the shocks/coils.

    I'm expecting the setup to shine when I go to Utah and go high speed on the desert roads. So here's a few pics from today:

    east.rollins.aboveclosure.jpg

    In the background of this pic after the road closure you can see the old Needles Eye railroad tunnel at the very top of the pass. Right about 12,000 ft.

    east.rollins.atclosure.jpg

    east.rollins2.atclosure.jpg
     
    Last edited: Aug 10, 2013
  7. Aug 12, 2013 at 2:28 PM
    #267
    monkeyface

    monkeyface Douchebag, or just douche if we're friends

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    Went on my old buddy of a road up to Deep Lake today. Dirt road with few rocks sticking up into the roadbed to slow you down, but rutted and washboarded quite a bit. This road is a good test of how the suspension will behave on desert roads like in SoCal, Utah, and AZ.

    The suspension did very, very well on the rutted and washboarded sections. I took it in 4HI with all the nannies enabled. I was able to accelerate well through the uphill washboarded sections, likewise I was able to brake well downhill through the washboards. No hopping around at either end, it was very stable and felt safe at high speeds (I'm talking relatively - say 40-45 mph on the ascent, and 65-70 on the flats at the top).

    Here's a couple pics. Had to bugout earlier than I wanted to since thunderstorms were rolling in, and that is NOT a road you want to descend during a rainstorm. Or after a rainstorm for that matter.

    This a portion of the ascent.

    flattops.ascent.jpg

    This section I took at 70 mph in 4th gear, stiff braking for the one turn down to about 55, then stomping on it to get back up to 70 to where I took the pic from.

    flattops.fr600.jpg

    I also did a simulated emergency lane change at 70 mph on the freeway, the truck did just fine there also. All in all, it's a good setup. The nannies didn't kick in a single time, and I was pushing it pretty hard.
     
  8. Aug 19, 2013 at 1:35 PM
    #268
    DESRTRNNR

    DESRTRNNR Well-Known Member

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    i was going to go with the baja package to upgrade my shocks and springs but Downsouth is hooking me up with killer deals on Icon's for the shocks and Camburg UCA's...
     
  9. Aug 19, 2013 at 4:36 PM
    #269
    Brandon###

    Brandon### [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Are they giving you free shock rebuilds and rental car during the downtime?:boink:

    Rebuilds recommended every 2 years or 30-40k

    I'm not an Icon hater, I just bought a set for our 3rd gen 4runner and read the rebuild recommendations on the instructions.

    The Baja kit is a great maintenance free, awesome riding alternative to the current aftermarket coilovers.
     
  10. Aug 19, 2013 at 5:20 PM
    #270
    DESRTRNNR

    DESRTRNNR Well-Known Member

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    no shocks are truly maintenance free... eventually those Billy's will either need to be rebuilt (if possible) or replaced at full cost... I'd rather have shocks I know i can have rebuilt.. I'll probably keep my OR suspension so i can swap them in and out whenever a rebuild is needed.. I test drove the Baja and loved the way it drove, I almost wish i had bought that package instead of the OR..
     
  11. Aug 20, 2013 at 9:14 AM
    #271
    Brandon###

    Brandon### [OP] Well-Known Member

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    True, but i would be willing to bet the bilsteins will last 100k miles without any issues. In the meantime Icon owners would have to rebuild their shocks 3 times.

    Sounds like a big PITA to me. (i will soon find out first hand)

    after 100k miles on the billies you can buy another pair with the money saved from not rebuilding the shocks over and over and over again.
     
    Last edited: Aug 20, 2013
  12. Aug 20, 2013 at 9:46 AM
    #272
    DESRTRNNR

    DESRTRNNR Well-Known Member

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    i dont think i'll get near 100k out of any shock.. i'd be lucky to get 30K.. i've worn out dual shocks on my bronco that fast.. and on my first rebuild i'll be upgrading them to RR
     
  13. Aug 20, 2013 at 3:00 PM
    #273
    monkeyface

    monkeyface Douchebag, or just douche if we're friends

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    So you're getting the Icon Stage I with Camburg UCA's? I'm curious to know the price if you don't mind sharing the details. The coil spring rate also. Are you planning on putting 285/75/16 tires on?
     
  14. Aug 20, 2013 at 3:05 PM
    #274
    DESRTRNNR

    DESRTRNNR Well-Known Member

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    I'll PM the prices to you.. but the front springs are rated at 650
     
  15. Aug 23, 2013 at 9:54 AM
    #275
    jaymac10

    jaymac10 Well-Known Member

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    OEM Baja Kit
    Quick question, is the rectangle piece the rear brake line extension bracket?

    And how best to mount the rear shock reservoir??

    Also, are there some washers and or any parts that need to be taken off of the stock suspension and put onto the baja suspension?

    My shop has my truck right now and is wondering if there is a instruction manual that shows how exactly they want the baja kit installed?

    I know it's pretty strait forward, but they were talking about some of these washers or small parts and just wanted to make sure they set it up correctly?

    Any help is greatly appreicated!

    Thanks,

    Jay
     
  16. Aug 23, 2013 at 10:10 AM
    #276
    jaymac10

    jaymac10 Well-Known Member

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    What's a better way to mount the rear reservoir?

    This way (aftermarket)?

    879fc18a_efaa86c0633523a4fdcd8cd25e93d11a24f3b054.jpg



    Or this way which is in STOCK form?


    2012-Toyota-Tacoma-TRD-TX-Baja-Series-le_388169996cfde39ef7de7ac1f4a02810ed2bc91a.jpg
     
  17. Aug 23, 2013 at 10:27 AM
    #277
    jaymac10

    jaymac10 Well-Known Member

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    Thanks Gelo!

    Do you have any other insights regarding my other questions:

    Much appreicated!

    Thanks,

    Jay
     
  18. Aug 23, 2013 at 1:33 PM
    #278
    monkeyface

    monkeyface Douchebag, or just douche if we're friends

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    I used all the stock rubber bushings and washers for the shocks except for the top nuts and washers to fit over the thicker shafts on the new shocks. The square thing for the brake line extender I still haven't figured out where that thing goes, just didn't want to admit it.

    For the RR's the driver side I put on the frame like Brandon and Littleblue did, the passenger side I mounted it IN FRONT of the shock in the frame cutout but canted a little bit to clear the bed mount, then I put some flex conduit on it just in case the braided line rubs.
     
  19. Aug 23, 2013 at 6:58 PM
    #279
    littleblue81

    littleblue81 Well-Known Member

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    I think stock is to put it on the frame now.
     
  20. Aug 23, 2013 at 7:43 PM
    #280
    Brandon###

    Brandon### [OP] Well-Known Member

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    mount the reservoirs on the frame.

    the rectangle is the brake line bracket extension

    there is no instruction manual despite what the sticker on the box says...

    reuse your stock parts
     

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