I'm sorry if this has been covered. I searched but couldn't find a specific thread about ARB fridge lids.
It may be because there isn't anything you can do about it.
My issue stems from my 99 4Runner and 50Q ARB fridge (new style). I built a slide for it, and that is fine. However, I cannot open the lid due to the 4runner's rear hatch. I can open it enough to get in and out, but when trying to remove say, a tupperware full of veggies from the bottom and needing to carefully lift other things from the top (such as a carton of milk) its very annoying not to be able to open the lid fully so it stays open on its own.
I've looked at drop slides, and this is an option, but either a very expensive (600ish for a slide on an 800 dollar fridge is starting to get pretty steep), or a pretty complicated build. I've got a ton of fab tools, so fabricating it isn't the issue. The issue is the time and the engineering to do it correctly without it weighing a ton.
I figured before spending the cash, or the time/effort to do a full on drop slide, I'd see if anyone here had a clever solution to this issue. As an example, some of my friends with 80 series have Engel fridges and they simply re-located the hinges to the side of the fridge lid, rather than the back. This allowed for the lift height of the fridge to be the short side , rather than the long side, which works fantastically. Not as easy on the newer ARB's.
Anyway, thanks for any thoughts you may have.
Cheers!
It may be because there isn't anything you can do about it.
My issue stems from my 99 4Runner and 50Q ARB fridge (new style). I built a slide for it, and that is fine. However, I cannot open the lid due to the 4runner's rear hatch. I can open it enough to get in and out, but when trying to remove say, a tupperware full of veggies from the bottom and needing to carefully lift other things from the top (such as a carton of milk) its very annoying not to be able to open the lid fully so it stays open on its own.
I've looked at drop slides, and this is an option, but either a very expensive (600ish for a slide on an 800 dollar fridge is starting to get pretty steep), or a pretty complicated build. I've got a ton of fab tools, so fabricating it isn't the issue. The issue is the time and the engineering to do it correctly without it weighing a ton.
I figured before spending the cash, or the time/effort to do a full on drop slide, I'd see if anyone here had a clever solution to this issue. As an example, some of my friends with 80 series have Engel fridges and they simply re-located the hinges to the side of the fridge lid, rather than the back. This allowed for the lift height of the fridge to be the short side , rather than the long side, which works fantastically. Not as easy on the newer ARB's.
Anyway, thanks for any thoughts you may have.
Cheers!