



part!
.Really and truly I don't want to up my tire size. 35s get me most anywhere I want to go and figure it will be even better once I can pound on the gas pedal without fear. Plus my wife was all for it when I told her we'd spend less time broken on the trail.
According to my measurements I'm only losing about 3/4."
My biggest problem with staying with my current tires is that now that I have the strength it's too easy to upsize and I've always wanted 40s![]()
Traded for another scout.
...
Going to use the good body parts off this one as well as the frame and drive train and put it together with the other good body I have to make a nice original scout for my wife which is what she wanted. On a side note, I found another that Im going to try to buy, I swear it will be the last one if I do.
:rofl:
. It didn't actually puncture the rubber but with the air out of the tire you can push your hand all the way through that bulge and touch the other sidewall, but it still holds air
. Got a friend that can get tires ordered me a blem, $150 for a 35-12.50. Had some overheating issues and I know my fans and radiator are big enough. When we pulled over to cool down I opened the hood and saw something that Ive never noticed before. My engine compartment is a funnel with nowhere for the heat to go but down the tranny tunnel. So I have cut part of the inner fenders out and I found a side panel off an old trane in my yard and used it for a hood louver.
. So now Ive got one that Im going to drill for hydro assist and swap it out the same time as the 60
.Many updates to come as I'm nearing the end of my Dana 60 and front spring swap, I still have to upload pics which is a pain with my slow azz internet.
Louvered hood was a flop since I'm impatient and can't weld sheet metal worth a flip I warped it pretty bad so I tossed it and put on another hood. Currently I'm repairing my hood latch/grill so I can do away with hood pins. Hopefully cutting out the inner fenders will give the air a place to escape.
The toyota gear box was a flop too. Spent several hours mocking it up and when I finally got it positioned to where everything lines up I found out I was going to have to limit up travel and turning to keep the tire from hitting the box. Also needed a bent drag link and the part that really canned it was needing a metric splined u-joint to connect my steering shaft. So I threw the old hydraulic stuff back on to get it going. Think Ive about decided to just upgrade my hydraulic stuff to a double ended ram with lr orbital and a psc pump and go with it.
Now my biggest revelation came from the brakes. Originally I had a scout master cylinder which worked ok but leaked. When I swapped in rear disks it got worse. Since scout masters are like all other scout parts, hard to find and damn expensive so I did what all the other scout guys did and swapped in a corvette manual master for disk brakes. Braking didn't improve but the leak was gone.
Now I swapped in a Dana 60 with bigger brakes and with hopes of better brakes. After rolling about 30ft past my mail box with the pedal on the floor I decided I'd had it and was planning on buying a wilwood master. But what size was the question.
Up until this time I thought manual master for manual brakes and power master for power brakes. After much research all my previous knowledge about master cylinders went out the window. It's all about matching caliper size to master cylinder bore and pedal ratio. Scouts have unusally long pedals so I have a high ratio and research said I needed a 1-1/8" bore master. Happened to have one on a 77 parts k10 (power brakes none the less). So I swapped it on to try, best brakes on an offroad rig I've ever owned. Plus I saved $200 on the wilwood master. In my mind that means I can spend $200 somewhere else.
Should have everything completed soon and out for a trail run. Sorry for all the words and no pics, hopefully my Internet will cooperate and I can get them up soon.

It is getting the tcase but not at this time. Ive got to finish up what I've got going and build a new cage to get it wheel able.
I'm collecting parts for the next stage of upgrades which will include a built tranny, that tcase with sye and heavy duty drive lines.
I like to get everything together and ready to go before I do an upgrade that way I don't have a. Lot of down time like I did on my Dana 60 swap. I'm still waiting on parts to finish it.
Many updates to come as I'm nearing the end of my Dana 60 and front spring swap, I still have to upload pics which is a pain with my slow azz internet.
Louvered hood was a flop since I'm impatient and can't weld sheet metal worth a flip I warped it pretty bad so I tossed it and put on another hood. ( Pop rivets are your friend ) Currently I'm repairing my hood latch/grill so I can do away with hood pins. Hopefully cutting out the inner fenders will give the air a place to escape. ( That will help, but watch for water and mud coming in from the tires )
The toyota gear box was a flop too. Spent several hours mocking it up and when I finally got it positioned to where everything lines up I found out I was going to have to limit up travel and turning to keep the tire from hitting the box. Also needed a bent drag link and the part that really canned it was needing a metric splined u-joint to connect my steering shaft. So I threw the old hydraulic stuff back on to get it going. Think Ive about decided to just upgrade my hydraulic stuff to a double ended ram with lr orbital and a psc pump and go with it. ( ( That would be the best way to go....Just keep the cyl up high out of the way )
Now my biggest revelation came from the brakes. Originally I had a scout master cylinder which worked ok but leaked. When I swapped in rear disks it got worse. Since scout masters are like all other scout parts, hard to find and damn expensive so I did what all the other scout guys did and swapped in a corvette manual master for disk brakes. Braking didn't improve but the leak was gone.
Now I swapped in a Dana 60 with bigger brakes and with hopes of better brakes. After rolling about 30ft past my mail box with the pedal on the floor I decided I'd had it and was planning on buying a wilwood master. But what size was the question.
Up until this time I thought manual master for manual brakes and power master for power brakes. After much research all my previous knowledge about master cylinders went out the window. It's all about matching caliper size to master cylinder bore and pedal ratio. Scouts have unusally long pedals so I have a high ratio and research said I needed a 1-1/8" bore master. Happened to have one on a 77 parts k10 (power brakes none the less). So I swapped it on to try, best brakes on an offroad rig I've ever owned. Plus I saved $200 on the wilwood master. In my mind that means I can spend $200 somewhere else.( Pfff brakes only slow you down......Spend the money on beer.
)
Should have everything completed soon and out for a trail run. Sorry for all the words and no pics, hopefully my Internet will cooperate and I can get them up soon.




And how long did it stay together? 3 days.
