I started this thread back in 2014 and have thrown an update in here and there. Well, here's another one. I finally got around to installing my Blazeland "weld it yourself" long travel kit.
This is for size comparison for height and width. The 3rd gen 4Runner has a 1 1/4 inch Bilstien lift up front and 235/85r16 (32") tires.
I am now over 3 inches wider per side than I was before, but if you want more travel out of the ifs front end this is the only way to do it. This is supposed to almost double front travel and give 12" of travel with low profile bumpstops. I haven't measured travel numbers yet; but since I will be running stock bumpstops I figure around 11 inches of travel is probably about where it will end up. Between the extra width and the added travel, the truck should feel a lot more stable on the trail and "three wheel" a lot less on certain trail obstacles.
Along with the longer upper and lower control arms I installed: new polyurethane bushings, Moog ball joints, extended brake lines, Old Man Emu torsion bars, and Bilstien 5100 series shocks. In the rear I added longer shackles to my Old Man Emu Springs as well as longer brake lines. Probably need longer rear shocks but for now the Old Man Emu's that are already there are going to have to do.
How does it ride? Awesome! My stock rubber bushings were wasted, as were my front shocks. I'm sure those new parts are the reason it rides so nice now, but holy cow, it feels like a brand new truck. Haven't taken it off-road yet, but just bombing down washboarded and potholed roads there is a night and day difference.
In my snowbank parking lot tests, everything now appears to clear without rubbing with 35's. I'm probably sitting at about 3 inches of lift now and the truck doesn't feel big at all. To compensate for the extra front end width, I used rebuilt OEM Toyota T-100 CV Axles from CVJ Axle in Denver, CO. They do nice work at a reasonable cost.
For extra width in the rear and to kind of match the front width, I installed 1.25" wheel spacers on each side. I didn't want to go wider than this for two reasons: I didn't want the extra leverage on the wheel studs; and most importantly, the wider you go the more it affects your turning radius. I think 1.25" per side should be a happy compromise between making the truck look right and still work on tight trails.
This is how she sits now looking at it from the side:
I am heading to Moab in a couple weeks for the Cruise Moab event and will be putting her to the test on a couple "new to me" trails. Plan on running all 3 of the trails on the way to Golden Spike, and the Pickle Trail. These should be a solid test of suspension performance and how front end parts hold up. I will report back after the trip.