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A Fool and his Money

778K views 2K replies 382 participants last post by  troy scott 
#1 ·
This build-up is a little bold given the fact that I have no history of modifying offroad vehicles past bolting aftermarket parts onto a couple of daily drivers:





... but one has to start somewhere.

A daily-driver 4x4 is not enough offroad vehicle to take advantage of the huge resource of rocky trails here in Arizona. I needed something more.

My original plan was to dig up some almost dead Toyota mini truck, upsize the tires and upgrade the springs, shocks and birfields. Then get a tube bender and figure out how to make a cage.

I have no experience bending tube, but I can do some welding.

While looking for the right mini truck, I bumbled across a mostly-dead FJ40 and it appealed to me... so I snatched it up for $2700. It's a '69, and it appears to have been in AZ for the vast majority of it's life. The frame was almost perfectly rust free and there weren't any major body flaws other than some rust in the floor on the driver's side foot well. However, it wasn't well cared for and otherwise looked like a beater.

The engine was running, and when I bought it, I drove it home:



The initial plan was to go spring-over and upsize the tires. I planned to tear down the F engine and rebuild it. I was going to cage it and then be done.

Then I started reading about engine swapping.

Then I started learning about 1-ton axles.

Then I started finding out about the limitations of the stock transfer case...

The project mushroomed rapidly.

I'm grateful for the resource of Pirate4x4, because theres a wealth of raw information here as well as some GREAT jump-off points for further investigation. I've learned a few things that are directly being used in my own project, but more importantly, I've seen how so many peoples' projects evolve through multiple re-designs and re-builds. I realized that there's only so much homework I can do before I have to just build something and tweak it till it works.

I began to tear it down in November.
 
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#4 ·
The NV4500 is LONG.

The LS1 is comparatively LIGHT.

I located the engine as far forward as I could go with clearance for a radiator and fan kit with hoses.





I stitched the riveted frame with some welds (a PITA... the primer and paint in the grooves didn't clear with wire wheeling and some of the welds were crackling and popping... plus my toxic exposure was way more than necessary!). Then I inset some 3/16" plate on the inner walls of the frame to take the engine mounts.





I built some mounts:



... and bolted the engine down:





The rest of the measurements started to get pulled off of that.
 
#12 ·
Once you're done, will you flip the bezel right side up?:flipoff2:

Cool build-up, keep us posted.
The bezel's upside down?? That's funny! That *HAS* to be some sort of Land Cruiser faux pas. It's disassembled now and you have my assurance that it will be reassmbled according to spec.

The guy who used to have it before me was some kind of meth tweaker and did some interesting "improvements" like cutting the hard top in half and scootching the rear part forward before fiberglassing it back together. I think he wanted it to look like a 45 with an open pick-up bed. It just looked like ass. The hard top was ruined. I was just lucky that the monthly large item trash pick up came only a few days after I got the thing home.
 
#13 ·
Drivetrain components came next.

Centerforce clutch, with Advance Adapters flywheel, pilot bushing, and NV4500-to-SBC bellhousing:















After I got everything lined up and stabbed the input shaft in to the pilot bearing, I looked at the line-up of the transmission bolt holes with the bellhousing...

$#|+ !!!!!!!

... wrong bellhousing. The bottom bolt holes didn't line up.

 
#14 ·
Once the transmission was located (and the bellhousing was replaced), I picked a spot for some crossmembers. My goal is to have a flat belly. I'm perfectly willing to heavily modify the tub in order to accomodate a misshapen tranny hump and clear the driveshafts.

The crossmembers are to locate the NV4500 support bracket bushings and a half inch thick skid plate under the transfer case.

Additionally, I'm doing a 4 link rear suspension and I'm lengthening the wheelbase to 108". For this reason, I need clearance under the rear frame that isn't accomodated by the stock frame curves. Rather than trying to do something subtle back there, I just decided to hack that part off and replace it with 2x3 .188 wall in a shape that I can work with:





"CUT HERE":













Then the crossmembers:



 
#15 ·
I had to re-do the aft crossmember because it was 3/16" off angled, but the second one is dead on... plus the welds are nicer.

Here's with the test fit of the skid plate and transfer case:





The engine mounting tabs got a re-do while the frame was bare, too. They were too wimpy. I also gussetted the mounts:

 
#16 · (Edited)
You are doing some really clean work there. The only thing I would do different is the tranny. For about 10 years I was a die hard stick guy, but with my new rig, I tried an Auto and my god... It really made me a better driver. With that said there are a lot of guys that make um work.

You have not said which axles yet, unless I missed it? Assuming Ford Highpinion 60 with the Tcase drop there.
 
#24 ·
I thought about the auto tranny when I decided that I was going to do a fuel injected engine swap, which meant I was venturing DEEP into unknown territory anyhow. I opted out for completely unscientific reasons. I just felt like doing a stick and I couldn't convince myself to do otherwise.

Good observation on the axles, by the way. I'm doing a D70U in the back and a high pinion 60 in the front. I've got both. I'll be posting up pictures about the axles over this weekend. I made tabs for the rear axle truss today which mate to the diff armor, and I cut out a big stack of 3/8" tabs to take the links.

Awsome build up. I am guessing you're not gonna have a tub by the looks of you're new rear frame? And also because you're engine and tranny are so high above the frame?
The tub is going to get cut up quite a bit to fit. I'm going to taper in the sides and probably take out the floor. My frame addition is measured to be below tub height. It doesn't actually go any higher than the highest point on th stock frame, but it angles up sharply instead of gradually, and then stays up.

At the least, I'll be chopping body mounts from the back of the tub and penetrating the floor to take the corners of the frame. Once I've got something close to a rolling chassis with drivetrain... I'll figure out what of the body metal I can make use of and what I have to cut off, modify or otherwise fake.

As far as tranny access, my plan is to build a totally removable tranny hump that fits this monstrosity and allows me full access from above. The skid plate drops for *some* access from below, but I may yet cross-cut the front crossmember at the ends of the gussets, add plates, and then through-bolt it back together so that it can be removable. That was my original plan for how to make a removable flat-belly crossmember.

I aborted the recutting of the crossmember because the frame had gone a bit out of alignment when I chopped it, and I had to physically clamp down one part of the frame and jack open another in order to restore it to nominal dimensions! Now, if I cut that member again, I may very well cause other parts of the frame to move. For now, I'm leaving well enough alone.

Here's a picture of the frame in clamps while I was trying to crank it back to normal, before welding in that front crossmember:



ditto; great work, sweet parts but i'm concerned about how high in the frame your powertrain is mounted.

keep it up! :beer:
Yeah. I'm concerned too. My original thought was that I wanted to maximize clearance under the engine for pumpkin and link up-travel while still achieving a flat belly. I probably could have slung a lower belly, raised the frame and achieved the same result. As it is, I'm going to have to make a tough decision later on about going with a ride height that I like or front suspension up-travel that I like. I have 16" travel coil-overs that I'm going to use, front and back, and I want them to give me their full value.



Is your skid/crossmember welded in? If so how do you plan to get the xfer/trans out? Through the top? I think we are all confused :D
You're not confused. I damn near painted myself into a corner! ;)

As mentioned above, the front crossmember may yet get made into a removable element, but I plan to make a (relatively) easy access tranny hump.

Cool deal, glad you started a build thread.

mike
I'm glad I took your advice. ;)
 
#26 ·
Nice to see a new face as well as shot of new blood in the cruiser world! Rig looks like its going to be pretty cool too. When I found pirate it changed my way of thinking of what a cruiser should be and its been a learning experiance ever since.

Keep posting pics, you can get alot of experianced "been there done that" info here that will save alot of pain and $$$ later.

Welcome to Pirate!


Chris:cool2:
 
#34 · (Edited)
I'm under way on the rear axle and links. I didn't get as much done this weekend on the axles as I'd hoped. I had entangling obligations.

Here are the axles. In this photo, the rear D70U is (obviously) already disassembled and the old shock mounts and spring perches are getting cut off:



Since then, I've made a truss:











... and then I added tabs to pick up the flange on the diff armor:

 
#35 ·
Next, I started to align the axle with the rest of the rig... this has been more of a PITA than I anticipated because the question arises as to exactly WHAT aspect of the vehicle is the key to "alignment". I chose the powertrain axis...

I got a string line centered on the frame and powertrain using a plumb bob. Unfortunately, this proved to me that the rear frame construction has moved about 3/8" to the left from where I last measured it, but I'll fix it later!

The axle is centered and square. I'm working on the links.

Here's the string line:



This week I received my rod ends and rod end hardware:



And so this weekend, I made some mock-up links out of HREW. Now I'm designing the tabs to weld to the frame and the axle tube:



Last week, I also got my headers:



... and installed them:



Here's a picture of the radiator:



... and fan:



I welded up a bracket to take this to the existing radiator mounting tabs on the front crossmember, but it's pointless to get this into the garage until the last minute... otherwise I'll end up accidently destroying it!

Right now, it lives in relative luxury...in a safe corner in my bedroom, behind a door that protects it from my tolerant, but annoyed wife! :D
 
#41 ·
I haven't welded any aluminum since a welding class when I was in school!

The radiator is a "found" item. It arrived as is, ready to fit into an FJ40 and capable of cooling the LS1. As it is, I'll be fighting for space. I have the engine as far forward as I possibly can go in order to make room for a reasonable rear drive shaft, given my tranny and transfer case choices. I'm moving the radiator as far up to the grill as I can go. This thing fits and the fan is pretty low profile. Thanks to those tabs, I can mount it with minimal bracketry.
 
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