Aha! I found you! Been following you on Instagram for a while drooling over your 80. Sub'd!
Haha thanks for following along! I didn't realize you were on expedition portal
I guess a long overdue update is in order with what's going on with the cruiser. After the power steering pump failure on the way back from Arkansas, another one went in only to fail not long afterwards. After that happened, I just parked the cruiser for awhile until finals were over and then replaced it with another pump which has since been great. Lately I have been concentrating on replacing all of the little wear items that have been bugging me over the past year.
First we started with the rear output bearing and seal on the transfer case. It has been leaking for several months now and the mess on my driveway has been getting larger and larger so it was definitely time.
While it was up on the lift I noticed a greasy driver's side knuckle. That surprised me as I had just replaced the inner axle seal last summer along with the brake upgrade. I went ahead and tore that down and put another seal in just to find a groove on my axle shaft. I also decided to check my passenger side wheel bearing as I had been getting some steering wheel shake (different from the tire shake) and noticed it had a decent amount of play going on. It was checked last summer when the driver's side was done and retorqued to 25 ft lbs, but had somehow come a little loose. Tightened both sides down to 30 ft lbs and it's been good since.
With the more messy tasks over with I started with the little stuff that has been bugging me for awhile. Ever since I put my yeti swing out on, I have not had my reverse camera due to the wires being too short. I lengthened them and was routing all the wires when I realized my camera had severe fading on the lens. I ordered a new camera which came with wires about 6" too short on the camera side so I can't wire it through the swing out arm. Now All I need to do is order a new one and pull the wires through. I absolutely hate soldering and working with tiny wires so I won't be messing with this camera.
I started with the shifter boot (PN 33555-60071). My transfer case portion of the boot had a small hole in it and the transmission linkage rubber was completely gone. I noticed it was gone back when I was building my console but at that time didn't think much of it. My shifter also recently developed a lot of slop and didn't firmly click into each gear it was shifted into. I ordered two shifter grommets (PN 90480-17177) and two shifter bushings (PN 90386-15003). I wish I had ordered 4 of the grommets because they were extremely tight to get into place and I ended up breaking one completely and slightly damaged another. When I replace them again I will be slightly filing them as to ensure they fit. The shifter bushings seemed to make the most noticeable difference in shifter slop. It's amazing how much movement the linkage had with the old bushings. They reside under the vehicle and had definitely seen their useful life expire.
This is how much excess material got shaved off one of my shifter grommets. I'm not sure if Toyota slightly changed the size over the years, but I could only find one part number for these.
Then I turned my attention to the steering shaft seal (PN 45292-35050). Mine had been long gone and with the 3FE's exhaust nearby my feet have been getting warm during the summers. This was very easy to replace and in combination with the shifter boot my interior has definitely experienced a reduction in noise.
With the necessary stuff completed, I removed my rear storage box and started designing my drawers and new air tank mounts.
The tank is 8" diameter so I cut 4" wide sections out of an 8.25" pipe and then notched out a section and added tabs so it could be bolted down until tight around the tank. I then made mounts to bolt it to my receiver. After using 5 bits for each hole drilling through nearly 3/4" of metal each time I realized I definitely should have used some u bolts, but oh well.
I still need to find my spare cap, but I'm glad to finally have a rear outlet.
Shifting focus to drawers that I am about to start, I have pretty much decided on using locking accuride 36" slides for the drawers and 26" non locking accuride slides for the tilting fridge slide. I am thinking 3/4" mdf should be good enough for the main 3 vertical supports of the drawers with narrower width mdf used for the drawers themselves. I am putting a large emphasis on these being as silent as possible. I plan to monstaliner the entire system so I don't think I'll have any issues with mdf getting soggy, but if anyone knows better let me know.