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Rick13

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Posts posted by Rick13

  1. You'll need a sleeve (or bushing) that slides over the bolt on the upper mount on each side. You could probably take a shock and upper bolt from one side and look for something that fits well (both inner/outer diameter and length).

     

    Sorry, no pic's...kind of made it up as I went IIRC.

     

    Does that help, or did I miss the question?

  2. No issues here Rick, just that it's a very well put together Pathy. You did a great job with it so always tough to see it go but sounds like it'll stay in the family.

     

    What are you getting next?? ;)

    Thanks, it's been a blast building this and I think it has plenty of life in it.

     

    I ended up buying a 2006 Toyota 4Runner V8 4WD Limited. I'll post pics if anyone cares.

  3. Hope no one gets angry with me, but after 11 years of ownership, 7 years of 4-wheeling with it, I've found myself wanting something different. I think it's just time for me.

     

    It also doesn't hurt that my nephew is the one who wants to buy it. I'll be meeting him in Casper, WY in August and he'll home-base it from Billings, MT.

     

    Please don't press me on the subject, my wife already said she'll be watching me closely to see if I cry like a little girl when I hand over the keys and see it driving away.

     

    The cool thing is I just took it over Red Cone Pass (my favorite trail around here) and I have another trip with my popup trailer and some mild wheeling scheduled in a couple weeks... so I'm stil enjoying it just the way it is.

  4. I had seen that, but I didn't have the $ to invest that much in upper links. I think they look great and bet they function better than mine though.

     

    Here we go...

     

    I spent some quality time under an R50 at my favorite pick n pull and got these for $11/each (was that too much?):

    IMG_20140308_164827_314.jpg

     

    Then cleaned them up for modification:

    IMG_20140413_174830_889.jpg

     

    I love my $12 Hazard Frought grinder. A quality wire wheel does quick work:

    IMG_20140413_195203_135.jpg

     

    Then off to my friend's garage where I went to town cutting/grinding to get ready for him to weld (new bolt/nut) while I drilled/tapped for the zerk fitting:

    IMG_20140421_190342_176.jpg

     

    All welded and assembled with a little anti-seize on the threads until I could grease them up:

    IMG_20140422_121408_352.jpg

     

    I ended up purchasing some new bushings and having them pressed in at my friends shop. He did it for free cause he said it was a "fun challenge" - what? Apparently these are harder to remove than I thought they'd be, even after reading horror stories on here. Once I got them back I rattle-canned some flat black paint on them.

     

    A big thanks to Rob (Alkorahil) for catching an ordering mistake and getting the right number of bushings to me. And thanks for the coffee mug!

     

    I pulled the old ones off (the bushings didn't look so good on either side), measure/estimated length for realigning my driveshaft, and voila (aka "wa la"):

    IMG_20140517_140828_877.jpg

     

    I originally thought about putting the end with the zerk on the lower/axle side for ease of servicing, but I think I like the "gravity feed" of the greased end being higher. After driving just 1 day there is visible grease on the threads, almost no "play" in the nut/bolt interface, and I'm really happy.

     

    After looking at receipts and paying my friend $20 for his hour of TIG welding, I think these were just about $95 (not counting time at the JY or time prepping with the wire wheel).

     

    So the best part is the vibration is now non-existent.

  5. So, I've got a couple friends who like to fab/weld on 3rd Gen T4R's and I really liked what some had done with their upper links. Their point was to allow the upper link to pivot/rotate and stop binding (and in some cases snapping) while doing some fairly moderate/hard core wheeling. My thought when seeing their creation was to copy the idea but allow for lengthening of the upper link to the point of better aligning the driveshaft/rear diff (pinion angle).

     

    Just know that I'm well aware of some of the arguements against what I have done, so please don't lecture me on driveshaft/angular mechanics and physics, I just wanted to reduce some stress on my rear/lower U-joint and see if my deceleration vibration (which was very slight) would go away and potentially get slightly more rear flex.

     

    Well, so far I'm very happy...I will post pics and soon as I get on a real computer:

  6. I thought they were all stock height struts (except for some extended length ones from Australia).

     

    I had Rancho RSX struts for about 3-4 years and never really thought that much about them. Then I went to KYB for the last 3-4 years and thought they were better at not topping out so much...then I remembered that I definitely had a pair of settled in springs and had added over 50lbs of weight to the front end (so that's probably why I thought they rode so much softer/controlled).

     

    I think I spent a little less on the KYB's if that helps.

  7. Hey, I had a quick question, I am in the trying to plan out how I want to lift my pathfinder and I found some coils I might like to get. If im reading it right, it will give me .5" of lift ( 1/2" ) I just want to make sure I am reading this right before I pull the trigger on buying them.

     

    https://ruggedrocksoffroad.com/medium-load-50-100-lbs-534-lift-front-springs-pair-nissan-pathfinder-1996-2004-by-old-man-emu-p-3856.html

     

     

    https://ruggedrocksoffroad.com/medium-load-stock-weight-to-gvw-534-rear-lift-springs-pair-nissan-pathfinder-1996-2004-by-old-man-emu-p-3858.html

     

    Thanks

    Yes, clicked on those and that's what I'd think too.

  8. I've heard from friends that there can be some bad reflection off the hood when mounting lights on the roof. Maybe that just depends on the mounting location (how far back/forward) and/or the throw/pattern of the lights (flood vs driving vs pencil beam), but thought I'd mention it just in case.

     

    Otherwise, I really like the look of the roof mounted light and figure they might throw more useful light.

  9. No offense taken Bushnut, my comment really wasn't meant for you but to the topic as a whole. I want to make sure it is clear that the SFD has functionality (to fit larger tires easily, get MUCH better belly clearance, and allow a really good coil spring lift out back...where all the flex is anyways IMHO). It's actually the only way I've been able to run trails rated up to 6-7 in my state and up to an 8 rated trail in Moab (scale of 1-10 for reference). Without it I'd be winching/dragging over way too many obstacles.

     

    So my real point was just to make sure someone wasn't pointed away from a SFD when it might be work really well for their purpose.

     

    I still think back to my 2" AC lift on 31" AT's (265/70/16) - I had a ton of fun with that setup and ran up to moderate trails around Colorado and even some in Moab.

     

    Agreed, spend some time in the Tire/Lift section and some others.

  10. Easy on the SFD. I definitely didn't spend 10 hours tearing apart my front end and putting back together "for looks".

     

    Does 01Silvapathy have a build thread. If he does that'd be a good one to reference since he fit 33's on the 2" AC lift. I think I remember him having a video showing what he had to trim. Mcgee, I think you should search for that just to get an idea of what folks have done. Silva's pathy has changed quite a bit since I joined NPORA.

     

    I'm too lazy to make a build thread.

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