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Frame Swap, Build & other stuff

Discussion in '1st Gen. Tacomas (1995-2004)' started by bushtaco01, Mar 29, 2024.

  1. Nov 16, 2024 at 12:05 PM
    #21
    Tour991

    Tour991 Supplier of used parts

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    James
    South Reno/Tahoe
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    97 2/4wd, 2014 DCLB 4x4, 99 T4R Limited (sold) 2024 4runner TRD Pro
    I think so, it all went to Miguel. I got the truck in Carson City NV from a guy who bought it already rolled. He got it for the motor and sold me the rest. The truck was from grass valley ca. The kid who had it rolled it off the road down a hill onto wood fence. The 6x6 fence post went through the roof just missing him. When I posted the ad for parts the kid reached out to me and gave me the whole backstory.
    Here's the thread for the part out. It has a lot of pictures of the truck in it.
    https://www.tacomaworld.com/threads/delete-ignore-old-post.554013/
     
  2. Nov 16, 2024 at 3:56 PM
    #22
    Empty_Lord

    Empty_Lord Toyotaholic

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    Dan
    Northwest Indiana/Chicagoland
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    66 Mercedes, 93 mr2, 95,98,01,02 Tacomas, 05 Tundra + others
    Too many trucks and mods to list.. check builds
    It’s not a terribly hard job. Really easy if you have access to a lift. Just a fair bit of money to source everything
     
  3. Nov 17, 2024 at 12:07 PM
    #23
    bushtaco01

    bushtaco01 [OP] Active Member

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    damn that's wild. cool to know the backstory, thanks for sharing!
     
    Tour991[QUOTED] likes this.
  4. Nov 17, 2024 at 12:47 PM
    #24
    bushtaco01

    bushtaco01 [OP] Active Member

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    I wouldn't say this would have been much easier if I had a lift. Really depends on how bad the rust is, how much patience you have, and if you have the right tools. All the simple things took way longer than expected for me. But then again, I was using a propane torch & wrenching for the first time. haha
     
  5. Nov 17, 2024 at 3:11 PM
    #25
    Empty_Lord

    Empty_Lord Toyotaholic

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    Northwest Indiana/Chicagoland
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    66 Mercedes, 93 mr2, 95,98,01,02 Tacomas, 05 Tundra + others
    Too many trucks and mods to list.. check builds
    I use to do the frames at the dealer. With the rack I got them down to 1.5 days (8-10 hour work days) worth of work. I’ve helped a few friends swap other brand trucks. Once you realize how little there actually is to remove the body it’s amazing how quick you can pull them lol

    the rust is a pita. But eh I deal with it on regular repairs for anything else so
     
  6. Nov 19, 2024 at 6:16 PM
    #26
    bushtaco01

    bushtaco01 [OP] Active Member

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    So you would lift the body off, transfer everything over to the new chassis, then drop the body back on? I read through the factory replacement manual at one point. Guess if I ever do it again I'll have to try it that way.
     
  7. Nov 19, 2024 at 8:29 PM
    #27
    bushtaco01

    bushtaco01 [OP] Active Member

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    Thanks for all the comments guys! Sure was a hell of project. So much it’s hard to recap.

    My last post left off with throwing together the rear. The original gas tank was rusted out and leaking so I junked the whole thing. Tracked down a parts guy who had a tank from a 2000 prerunner. Came with the filler neck, fuel pump assembly, a solid skid and tank strap. I decided to use the pump assembly from my truck (with new fuel pump, filter, and gaskets), but unfortunately the fuel level sensing float gets caught inside the tank somewhere so the fuel needle doesn't go very far past empty. At least the light turns on when its really low.. good enough for me and no more EVAP codes. Someday I'll swap in the correct one.

    Other than that, I cleaned up the E-brake cable and LSPV both of which were still in pretty good shape on my truck. Hooked up all the brake lines, rebuilt the drum brakes (new wheel cylinder, shoes, springs, etc), connected and adjusted the E-brake...

    drums.jpg

    Oh yeah, new wheel bearings of course. Found a great local machine shop guy that would do any job for 25 bucks flat (which is insane), and a damn good job at that. Sergio from Ted's Auto on MLK blvd if anyone in the LA area is looking for a guy. I'd just drop off the parts and he'd have it done by the end of the day. He pressed new bearings for the rear axles, sandblasted and pressed bearings for the spindles, assembled coilovers, and restored calipers.

    Here are some nice before & afters...

    1. Spindles. These were a major PITA because I busted a few of the LBJ bolts and had to drill them out of the spindles. Took me multiple days and many drillbits..... one of the worst parts of the project rivaling the seized body mount bolt. But hey, looking fresh now. All new bearings, seals, and dust covers. Painted them up black with the chassis saver paint before reinstalling them. With new LBJs of course.

    spindleBefore.jpg spindlesRestored.jpg


    2. new Coils, UCAs, rotors, brake pads, inner & outer tie-rods, marlin brake lines... donor LCAs, steering rack (HUGE thanks again to @Broke Okie Ty), restored CV axles and calipers...

    frontSuspensionBefore.jpgbrakes and rotors.jpg

    Some close-ups...

    LCAs.jpgCVaxles.jpg

    Was gonna throw new seals in my front diff but they looked totally fine. Good trick for getting the CV axles back in is to get it started in the hole with the clip facing down, hold them straight out and tap the end firmly with the palm of your hand. This took some time but got them in there eventually.

    And then for the finale. Everything was back together except I didn't bleed the brakes yet. In a rush to get out of town for a couple weeks I wanted to move my rig to one side of the driveway so my roomates could use the other half. Sure enough I accidentally fired it right into the garage, crashed it into my old frame which luckily stopped it from knocking the house down but poked a couple nice holes in the drywall.

    Something had to go wrong... haha but could have been way worse.

    noBrakesYet.jpg

    Anyway, got the box back on it. Almost done! Just need to put on the bumpers & bleed the brakes and repair my drywall, then I could use the truck to move all my stuff to a new place. Neighbors were probably pretty happy to see the project coming to a close. ha.

    sittingpretty.jpg
     

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