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Classic Single Cab Build

Discussion in '1st Gen. Builds (1995-2004)' started by S.Beaty, Mar 2, 2025.

  1. Mar 2, 2025 at 9:10 AM
    #1
    S.Beaty

    S.Beaty [OP] Member

    Joined:
    May 9, 2018
    Member:
    #253054
    Messages:
    17
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Shawn
    Vehicle:
    2004 Tacoma ExtraCab 4wd
    Stock
    I've been wanting to build a single cab for years. So long in fact that the style of most builds has changed dramatically and it seems most get towed to wheel. My goal is to build a street truck. No trailers. Drive it to the trails, wheel it and drive home, go for ice cream etc. Because of this a certain amount of simplicity, redundancy, and of course mechanical sympathy from the driver is required.

    I picked up a fairly good condition 1999 Tacoma 2wd a few years ago with the intent to solid axle swap it.

    upload_2025-3-2_7-15-35.gif IMG_2400.png

    IMG_2527.jpg IMG_4028.jpg

    IMG_4100.jpg IMG_4115.jpg

    IMG_4875.jpg IMG_5463.jpg

    IMG_5885.jpg

    Specs/plans:

    A lot to unpack here…

    Engine

    - 2RZ (2.4L 142hp)
    - LC Engineering header, and exhaust.

    - I never said it would be fast… The 4 cylinders are much easier to work on. Have less power to break parts and the small displacement should get better mileage idling along the trail. The LC Engineering header is said to drop the RPMS the engine makes peak torque at. I justified this to myself as the truck came with the stock cast manifold prone to cracking. The exhaust is mostly just for sound and to replace the old leaking exhaust. I like the sound of a 4cylinder much more than the 3.4’s.

    Transmission and Transfercase

    - Rebuilt W56
    - Gear drive duals 2.28x4.7 with Marlin adapter and gears.
    - Custom transmission and transfercase crossmember.
    - Dave’z Off-road triple shifter
    - VSS on the w59 currently in the truck may swap over. I may need one from an earlier truck to work however.

    -This is the classic transfercase setup. I’ve had a single 4.7 case before but never duals. I’m very excited to try them out. I plan to put them where they fit. The W56 being a bit smaller than the r150 may be helping me. It looks like I can raise the transfercase a couple inches beyond a stock 4wd. I also plan to lift the engine engine about an inch. The triple sticks keep the shifters neat and allow me to keep the bench seat for now.

    Axles, Suspension and Steering

    - 63.25” Diamond Housing to suit stock FJ80 shafts and outers.
    -8” 5.29 Elocker (high or low pinion depending upon fitment, I have both to choose from)
    - LEAF SPRINGS. 2” lift springs for a 1985 Toyota from OME. I picked 2 of the same side so the arch is the same side to side.
    -12” 7100 Short Body Shocks
    - T100 oil pan kit
    - IFS Steering box, I’ve had one from my old truck. Already tapped for hydro assist.
    - Leaf spring 70 series Land Cruiser pitman arm (it’s long)
    - Low steer using a ruffstuff Inverted T steering kit with a bent drag link to clear the leaf springs. (Up travel, no to minimal frame cutting)
    - 1” x 10” hydro ram limited to steering travel required.


    - Diamond Semi-float housing
    1/2” narrower than standard Tacoma width. (Fits the dimensions I’m going for. There’s enough spline on the stock shafts to make this work if I need to trim them down)
    8” Elocker 5.29
    - LEAF SPRINGS All-Pro 3” standard leafs.
    - 12” Bilstein 7100 Short Body Shocks

    The suspension was tricky to figure out enough ahead of time to believe it is going to work for the height I am shooting for and the uptravel I want to get out of it.
    It took some serious web wheeling and laying under the truck with a measuring tape.

    The front suspension will be a Deviation from the standard SAS. A few key points that will help keep the truck low and drive-ability good.

    - The drop hanger will drop the Spring eye 3” from the bottom of the front frame. It will be moved forward a bit more than standard to facilitate the axle being kept centred on a spring with a 45” length and a 22.5” front section.
    -Springs will be mounted at 31.5” spacing. (Standard Toyota is 29”)
    - Standard SAS Shackle tube through the frame ahead of the Body mount.
    Doing it this was keeps the mounting points as close to level as possible. Combined with having the axle centred on the leaf springs (front to back) reduces the amount of driveshaft plunge, reduces brake dive and should also help with unloading on climbs. Even with these changes the axle will still have a slightly rearward axle path until the spring goes negative. The 31.5” mounting width helps place the shackle on the frame and gives clearance to the elocker diff.

    The rear suspension will be pretty standard but I want to ensure I use a shackle length long enough to work effectively with the spring growth. This means the shackle will be about 5.5-6” long. I may run slightly longer and run the mount through or above the frame to adjust ride height and prevent the rear spring eye from being too low.


    - Brakes: Stock 5 Lug Master is already 1”…. Bonus!
    -FJ80’s already have fairy large brakes and thicker rotors than even the tundra brakes swap. They’ll fit a very low backspacing 15” wheel. (Thinking this would be good for a snow wheeling tire setup)
    - The rear will be the standard semi float drum setup. I may add a little extra leverage into the linkage to make the ebrake have a bit more holding power.

    - I really wanted to try being narrower in the rear as most drag axle buggies do this to improving the turning circle to avoid cones (or trees in my case). I would like to implement some cutting brakes on the rear axle but the bench seat will have to take a hike first.

    It’s not so much different that a set of wheel spacers can’t be used to tune it out if it is not working out for ruts when snow wheeling or v-notches in the rocks.


    Wheels and Tires:
    - 37" Tire
    - 17x8.5” -19 offset Raceline Avenger Beadlocks (weigh 33lbs each!)

    37’s are the standard on Toyota driveline and I don’t want to push the limit. Going with a single cab and staying light weight just makes them that much more suitable. I also have a dream that I can cram a 37” spare under the bed. The frame rails are wide enough, the length is there and if I remove the factory spare cross member and put the tire up to the bed floor it should’ve hang down much differently than stock.

    The wheels were chosen in an offset to keep the truck as narrow as reasonable without limiting steering. The FJ80 axle can turn about 35° before the felts contact and I want to preserve that.

    I want to keep most of the tire tucked under the body. Since the front is wider I have some fiberwerx 3.5” fenders. They seem to measure only slightly wider than a set of factory flares for the front.

    I'll be shooting for about 19” belly, and a 107-108” wheelbase. Outside tire measurements should be about 77” front and 73.5” rear. Target weight is 4000lbs

    I can’t promise steady progress, but this thread is to keep me accountable and log my progress.
     
    Last edited: Mar 3, 2025
  2. Mar 2, 2025 at 9:10 AM
    #2
    S.Beaty

    S.Beaty [OP] Member

    Joined:
    May 9, 2018
    Member:
    #253054
    Messages:
    17
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Shawn
    Vehicle:
    2004 Tacoma ExtraCab 4wd
    Stock
    Progress up to this point.

    I’ve been keeping parts from my 1985 truck and a few parts trucks for a new build for about 10 years now, while I went to school, got a red seal, bought a house etc.

    My 1985 had an r151 which I regrettably sold. But I still had a spare low mileage W56B. Unfortunately the transfercase and transmission bolts were so corroded it ruined the rear case of the transmission when splitting them. So I rebuild it anyways.IMG_5007.jpg IMG_5130.jpg

    Running the R151F in my 1985 allowed me to run a 23 spline 4.7 single case. At the time I ordered the gears Marlin was out of the standard gears so I got the competition 4.7’s on sale. Sweet.

    After my 85 I used its case along with a Trail-Gear Verso kit to flip the case and bolt it in my 1996 4runner. Using the case I kept from my 85 and the spare one on the w56 gave me everything I needed for duals.

    onto the teardown…
    IMG_5150.jpg

    Unfortunately I found an issue I had suspected. I while back I read on the forums that Trail-gear modified one of the stock gears for the verso without and heat treat after machining. I’m no expert but I believe these gears are case hardens so once you machine them past the hardened layer your back to regular steel. Here’s a picture of that issue. My case had probably 15000 miles on it.
    IMG_5289.jpg IMG_5290.jpg IMG_5292.jpg IMG_5585.jpg

    I don’t need these parts but it makes the Verso kit a paperweight.

    Here’s the rest of the cases going together. The Triple shifter will need some work as none of the shifters are in quite the right spot. Everything is steel so easily modified with a MIG welder and a grinder.

    IMG_5179.jpg IMG_5181.jpg IMG_5551.jpg IMG_5590.jpg IMG_5639.jpg

    IMG_5289.jpg
     
    Last edited: Mar 2, 2025
    Brice, WormSquirts and dzuf like this.
  3. Mar 2, 2025 at 9:11 AM
    #3
    S.Beaty

    S.Beaty [OP] Member

    Joined:
    May 9, 2018
    Member:
    #253054
    Messages:
    17
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Shawn
    Vehicle:
    2004 Tacoma ExtraCab 4wd
    Stock
    Axles.

    I’m a Toyota nerd through and through and for as long as I’ve had a Toyota truck I’ve wanted Diamond axles for it. There’s a pretty good chance if you have custom axles I’ve sent you a PM or message on Instagram quizzing you about your axle width, wheel offset, what you like about it etc.

    My goal was to be just wide enough to maximizing the steering of a Toyota axle, reduce the scrub from spacing out a stock housing and still be as narrow as I can so it looks okay on the street.

    I had a pile of mini truck spares and originally the plan was to run IFS hubs front, full float rear with 4runner disc brakes and internal drum Ebrake. I initially contacted Brian at Front Range Off-road and things were looking good. We sent a few emails back and forth and then silence. I couldn’t get a response even when I request a total and that I would like to place an order. In a desperate attempt to get in the queue for housings as I already knew they would take a while I placed an order on the website and sent an email regarding the remaining parts. I followed up every few weeks but I received no response for about 6 months. Then I received a simple reply that they would get to me soon. Sometime last fall I learned that someone had recently received a housing that they had ordered 2 months prior. I was upset, and sent an angry email. I received a phone call from Brian the next day and we hashed out the final details.

    Sometime in the middle of all of this a FJ80 Elocker axle popped up for sale and I purchased it knowing the width would be close to what I need and it would have no custom parts that may be hard to track down.

    I specd the front housing to suit the fj80 shafts and outers. Bigger birfs, trunion bearings and knuckle balls are all a bonus of going to an 80 series axle. Not well known is that they have a higher KPI (13° vs 9.5°) and therefore a much better scrub than a mini truck with IFS Hubs. I determined that with the wheel offset to create the width I wanted I would have the same scrub radius as a stock FJ80.

    For the rear, Brian seemed unsure about the rear full float stuff being available. Not wanting to wait any longer and fearing custom parts may be hard to replace in the future I switched to a standard semi-float with drums. The housings themselves provide so much support that the durability of the components in them goes up. I’ve never broken a stock rear shaft so I am not too worried about this. However it is known Tacoma axle shafts can bend at the wheel mount surface so either 4runner or chromoly aftermarket shafts will be swapped in.

    After all that, they still took another 2.5 months to get. Really sucks to go through such an ordeal but over the last year I’ve had a lot going on between changing jobs, buying a my first home and moving 400km. I didn’t have the time to work on the truck too much anyways.

    Here they are.
    IMG_6177.jpg
    IMG_6484.jpg
    IMG_6489.jpg
    IMG_6488.jpg
     
    Last edited: Mar 2, 2025
    Brice, ToyRyd04 and WormSquirts like this.
  4. Mar 2, 2025 at 9:11 AM
    #4
    S.Beaty

    S.Beaty [OP] Member

    Joined:
    May 9, 2018
    Member:
    #253054
    Messages:
    17
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Shawn
    Vehicle:
    2004 Tacoma ExtraCab 4wd
    Stock
    Some Inspirational photos. IMG_3404.jpg IMG_1462.jpg IMG_1461.jpg IMG_6378.jpg IMG_6130.jpg IMG_3204.jpg IMG_3388.png IMG_6510.pngIMG_6509.jpg
    IMG_4273.png IMG_4353.jpg IMG_2941.jpgIMG_3134.jpg
     
    Last edited: Mar 2, 2025
    Brice, WormSquirts and dzuf like this.
  5. Mar 2, 2025 at 10:53 AM
    #5
    dzuf

    dzuf Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Sep 12, 2022
    Member:
    #405644
    Messages:
    145
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Darcy
    British Columbia, Canada
    This is going to be good!
     
  6. Mar 2, 2025 at 10:59 AM
    #6
    easleycrawler

    easleycrawler Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Aug 25, 2016
    Member:
    #195473
    Messages:
    4,478
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Travis
    Easley, South Carolina
    Vehicle:
    2014 RC Taco 4wd
    Hell yeah. Love a 1st gen regular cab sas.

     
  7. Mar 2, 2025 at 1:02 PM
    #7
    WormSquirts

    WormSquirts Armageddon

    Joined:
    Dec 18, 2015
    Member:
    #172583
    Messages:
    2,802
    First Name:
    Braeden
    BC
    Stoked to see this thing finally being built dude!!! Keep up the progress!!!
     
  8. Apr 15, 2025 at 8:34 PM
    #8
    S.Beaty

    S.Beaty [OP] Member

    Joined:
    May 9, 2018
    Member:
    #253054
    Messages:
    17
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Shawn
    Vehicle:
    2004 Tacoma ExtraCab 4wd
    Stock
    I’m at a point now where I’ll be making more steady progress so it’s time for an update.

    Picked up wheels and tires.

    IMG_6348.jpg IMG_6574.jpg IMG_6584.jpg IMG_6593.jpg IMG_6594.jpg

    The wheels are 17x8.5 -19mm offset. This works out to about stock scrub radius on an 80 series axle.

    I went with 37” KM3’s. I like the look and the narrow tread width. I’ve had good luck with BFG’s in the past despite others experiences so I decided to go with them again.

    Mocked up on a stock 80 series housing. The knuckles turn 35° give or take when the wipers start to smoosh. The blue line represents the outside edge of the leaf spring. The rounded profile of the KM3’s should really help maximize the steering angle.
    IMG_6684.jpg



    Moving on from the wheels and tires I started on the passenger front spring perch. It’s a bit tricky to come up with a leaf spring mounting solution since it rides up the centre section.

    Originally I had planned to make these stubby u-bolts work with some kind of retaining device.
    IMG_6596.jpg

    After shaping the perch to fit the housing at the width I needed I realized I just didn’t have the room.
    IMG_6619.jpg


    Plan B…IMG_6629.jpg IMG_6630.jpg IMG_6631.jpg IMG_6656.jpg IMG_6669.jpg IMG_6673.jpg IMG_6729.jpg

    I drilled and tapped a chunk of 1” square stock, and contoured it to fit the housing as well. I went 1” over something 1/2” like the Ruffstuff u-bolt eliminators. I was concerned the mild steel threads would strip much easier than the hardware that threaded into it.

    Since this moved the mounting holes on this side over, I had to create a new “special” U-bolt plate with offset holes.
     
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  9. Apr 15, 2025 at 8:48 PM
    #9
    S.Beaty

    S.Beaty [OP] Member

    Joined:
    May 9, 2018
    Member:
    #253054
    Messages:
    17
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Shawn
    Vehicle:
    2004 Tacoma ExtraCab 4wd
    Stock
    Drove the truck around a little bit for the past couple weeks and then yeeted the rear axle out to get things under way. Mounted the 3” All-pro springs and rear housing.

    I have to cut the abs rings off my Tacoma axles for mock up and the centre pins don’t fit the u-bolt plates. :frusty:

    IMG_6696.jpg IMG_6715.jpg IMG_6762.jpg IMG_6780.jpg IMG_6781.jpg IMG_6782.jpg
    IMG_6783.jpg
     
    Brice, ToyRyd04, dzuf and 1 other person like this.
  10. Apr 16, 2025 at 9:19 PM
    #10
    Yetimetchkangmi

    Yetimetchkangmi Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Jun 19, 2013
    Member:
    #106605
    Messages:
    3,533
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Benjamin
    Newcastle, WA
    Vehicle:
    03 Tacoma 4x4 The Yeti
    ARB front locker, Custom high clearance rear bumper, Custom plate front bumper, mile marker winch PE8, safari snorkel, Deck Plate Mod Fox 2.5 rr DSC, Camburg UCA, squeaky Dakar leafs, 5125 10" and custom 7.5" shackles, thee finest PNW pinstripes, MT-R, Nissan crew cab roof rack??? wtf is that about??? Allpro skids, Rigid duallys President McKinley CB with PA Recaro SRD with Wedge Engineering Morimoto retrofits Champion Rad - Failed Tundra brakes
    Mad FLEX!

    It's coming along!
     

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