To keep this Montero-related, I was at the IncX compound today and we sort of test drove Jose's 90 SWB. It needed a battery and to have the five quarts of oil mixed with three quarts of gas drained out of it and at least some real oil put back in. This stopped the heavy smoke coming out of the exhaust. We each drove it independently, then compared our impressions. I guess we both noticed that the front end seemed a little loose and Josh noticed the lugs nuts were about to fall off, so we tightened them and filled the tires (new 31's that came with the truck, with the shortest valve stems the shop must've had that day) with air. Aside from the hillbilly exhaust that rests on the rear brake line, threatening to saw through it, and the severely cracked windshield, the thing could actually be driven on the highway. And driven on the highway is exactly what it needs, in order to get it up to temp and break loose everything bad inside the engine and exhaust and blow it onto the windshields of Prius drivers left in its wake. It seems like a pretty good truck.
I took Jorge's 86 out to the compound, its first long-ish trip in almost a year. No issues. The thing runs like a champ with plenty of 2.6 magic "power" and cold a/c. Currently, it's running on three 30x9.5-15 Michelin all-terrains and one oddball 31x10.5-15 that's about the same height, and the age and less-than-perfect balance of the tires shows a bit, particularly at speeds nearing 70, which it seems happy to do for extended periods of time. It's actually fun to drive a stick shift 2.6 once in a while. It shows off how far the Montero line came in just a few short years, graduating from leafs to coils and then to progressive rate coils in the Gen 2's. It's still fun, though, primitive as it is (doesn't even have a radio, presently, and this one is so basic it doesn't have the center gauge cluster or carpet over the wheel wells).
IncX, thanks for dealing with the used oil, the miscellaneous parts and for not making me crawl around underneath the thing. Appreciate it.
John B.