Okay, time for the good stuff:sombrero:
I have always wanted a snorkel on my vehicle. I did not have one on my 1980 Range Rover 2-door, nor my Defender 110Tdi. I don't care if I need it or not, and I'm not going to espouse why I need one. I just want one.
So, I placed a call to Eli at Camel4x4, importers of IronMan products from Australia. IronMan have a snorkel for the Prado, and as you know by now, the GX is basically a sexier, fancier Prado, with a V8 in it.
So Eli sent me the snorkel, and of course Sierra Expeditions did the installation for me. Since I did not want to take a hole-saw to my fender, I wanted someone I could blame if it went wrong.:sombrero:
So when the box arrived, was when I really started getting excited:

The IronMan snorkel is not some cheap Asian-made snorkel. IronMan goes to great pains to explain the makeup of their snorkel including the plastic, UV protection, strength etc. So I was confident I was not putting on some junk.
first task is removing the airbox

Kyle from Sierra Expeditions got down to the task, and he's done so many snorkels I was confident in him doing all the work.

In a rare break from his orders, Wil checks on Kyle's work. The template for the Prado is great for the GX, since it is mostly the same bodywork.
After marking the holes with the included template, it's time to drill. Where possible, get someone else to do it:sombrero:

The benefit of air tools is no end to the torque. Mounting holes being drilled into the fender.
Next is cutting the hole for the main intake.
Measure 6 times and cut once.

Kyle decided he could do this installation without removing the fender or flare, so he simply worked through the inside fender flap.
Next is installing the mounting bolts into the nutserts.
now measuring the holes for the A-pillar bracket
