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Toyota Hilux MK5 Restoration And UZ Swap.

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  • #31
    Saturday the 28th June is D-Day!

    My truck's going into the bodyshop. I'm going to spend the day stripping it in preparation. I'm losing the roof guttering / black trim, the channels either side of the roof are having steel welded in.

    I'm still looking for a heated rear screen.

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    • #32
      Saturday the 28th June at 09:30 hrs, I loaded my truck with all the stockpiled parts, and drove off to the bodyshop. 6 hours later, she was stripped down, ready for prep work, then paint. My fender flares turned up yesterday, so just in time. What was accomplished today:

      Front indicators / side lamps removed.
      Headlamps removed.
      Grille removed.
      Headlamp lower trim removed.
      Grille lower trim removed.
      Front valence removed.
      Front bumper removed.
      Side repeaters in fenders removed.
      Bonnet removed.
      Door mirrors removed.
      Door glass removed.
      Door handles removed.
      Door latch assemblies removed.
      Door glass seals and runners removed.
      Doors removed.
      All wheel arch plastic liners removed.
      Front mud flaps removed.
      Rear windscreen removed.
      Rear lamp clusters removed.
      Roof rain channels removed.
      Roof revolving beacon removed (and not going back on).
      Tailgate removed.

      The front screen is bonded, so it needs to be removed by a professional. I managed to remove the rear tub (load area) from the chassis. It is bolted to the chassis frame by 8 bolts - 4 on each side. This was a pig of a job, as mud and the elements had taken their toll on the bolts and nuts.

      I'm installing a 4" body lift kit, so the old and rusty bolts and nuts will be junked.

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      • #33
        Some pictures of my truck as I left her yesterday. I'll be popping in during the week, between work and other obligations. And I'll definitely be there next Saturday.









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        • #34
          Mini update!

          I dropped into the bodyshop this arvo, to see how things were progressing. The base frame for the custom rear hydraulically-operated bed lid is pretty much done. Tomorrow it will have a couple of diagonal braces welded in, to give the sheet metal skin more support.

          The Toyota door hinges turned out not man enough for the job. Besides being on the weak side, the opening angle was wrong, the deck lid would contact the rear of the bed when opened. A twin-trapezoid / pantograph design was called for, this would allow the lid to lift at the hinged end, and move rearwards when it was operated. This would prevent unwanted contact with the bed top rail.

          I opted for Audi A4 Sedan B5 trunk hinges. Besides being immensely strong, they incorporate hydraulic rams, that will assist the main hydraulically-operated rams on the lid.

          I also took the opportunity to mark the areas that I want welded over, and smoothed off. The deck lid will be test mounted tomorrow. Things are looking great.

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          • #35
            Some pictures. Note the areas marked in marker pen, and the instructions to the shop.







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            • #36
              More...





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              • #37
                Sometimes, you learn hard lessons. Cheap is seldom good, especially when it comes to knock-offs. I got bitten by the very thing I warn others about.

                I'm talking Chinese knock-off! ;D

                I ordered a set of fender flares for my truck, all the way from East Asia. Well they looked good in the pictures. Unfortunately, they're replicas, made out of fibre glass. While this is not necessarily a bad thing, the set I got will take some fettling to get them anywhere close to fitting. They might as well be made for a Range Rover, they are that much out, especially the rears. They can be reworked, but will take time, and that's something I don't have much of.

                They are also much thicker than the OEM Toyota items, and the fronts don't taper towards the bumper. The result is a very sudden step from fender to bumper. Arrrrgh! >

                I ended up purchasing used but OEM Toyota items. They are of course for the double cabin model, the fronts are the same as on my single cabin truck, the rears however are different. A small section of the flares are on the cabin, just behind the rear doors, i.e the rear flares come in two sections. Still, I'm happy to work with those. Being ABS plastic, they are much more flexible, and durable. Glass fibre is brittle. Fine, until it gets struck, then it shatters.

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                • #38
                  These are the glass fibre Chinese copies. Note the front flares at the top of the pictures, where it would meet the bumper. Very chunky, and abrupt:



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                  • #39
                    And compare with OEM Toyota items. Again, the flares at the top are for the front, nice finished ends. Note the flares for the rear are split, with the smaller sections normally fitted to the wheel arches on the truck's cabin. These will be reworked to fit my single cabin truck:



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                    • #40
                      It wasn't all doom and gloom though - I've been on the hunt for a heated rear screen for my single cabin truck. As I stated earlier, UK-spec single cabin Hilux's were never available with heated rear screens, this being reserved for the top-spec double cabin, in VX trim.

                      I got one from the least likely of places, an automobile glass supplier to the aftermarket. It was delivered to me at work today.

                      The old glass was shot, all etched by the rear bed cap over the years. There was no way it was going back on my truck after paint.

                      The side windows have faint scratch marks. Not really noticeable, but I'm fussy. And as I intend to tint the glass 40% dark, I knew the scratches would become more prominent.

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                      • #41
                        Bed caps can seriously scar your cabin, as I found out. The worn down paint at the rear of my cabin came from years of fitting and removing the cap.

                        Grit caught between the cap and cabin, as well as between the cabin rear screen and cap screen rubber, really messed things up. The cap is currently sitting in my garage, alongside the rear roll bar.

                        In her cap days:





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                        • #42
                          Some of the unwanted holes have had steel welded in place. I had a couple of larger pieces of steel stamped out. These are to weld into the bed grooves, where the tie-down hooks are, on both sides of the bed. These measure at 8' x 5.5" respectively.

                          I'm getting two more strips cut out, to weld into the rain channels either side of the cabin roof.

                          Areas plated over so far:

                          Rear reflector holes.
                          Rear fog lamp hole.
                          Cabin roof beacon hole.
                          Driver's fender aerial hole.






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                          • #43
                            Picture of old and new rear screens. Note the deep etching on the old, non-heated glass. Well past it's best. It'll certainly keep the cabin dry if fitted, but that's about all it's good for:

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                            • #44
                              I spent the day away from work, and the bodyshop, I had to have a stainless exhaust system made up for a friend's Old Skool Audi Cabriolet.

                              However, some progress has been made in my absence. I got a call letting me know my Audi A4 B5 Sedan trunk hinge system had been fitted, and could I come down to see if it was okay? The thing is, I was 73 miles away, in Basildon. So it would be a mad dash back to Hayes.

                              Still, I got back in good time. The hinges have been fitted, and the cantilever-like set up works just the way I thought it would. The hinges are currently secured to the sides of the bed by 10mm self-tappers. I'm going to drop down some bolts and nuts tomorrow. The idea is the nuts will be welded in as captives (on the outside, within the groove / hook area). Because once the hook area is plated over and smoothed, the won't be any access, should I wish to remove the lid.

                              Tomorrow, I'll pop into the bodyshop during my break, and show the fabricator exactly where I want the hydraulic ram retainers to be welded to the frame, and the tab for the catch. The rams on the hinges are not strong enough to hold the lid open. I'm also toying with the idea of having no lock on the new tailgate, (which has been temporarily fitted to ensure the plated-over hook recess on the bed sides matches the profile of the tailgate perfectly).

                              I also took the opportunity to have the roof rain channel steel plates cut out, and dropped off. These will be welded in place tomorrow.

                              Once the bed lid' frame's hydraulic ram tabs have been welded in place, along with the catch tab, I'm taking the frame back to my fabricator, who will then weld in the support trusses, followed by the skin itself. Then it's back to the bodyshop for finishing.

                              We're cooking on gas, well on track. Things are looking great.

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                              • #45
                                Welcome to the madhouse, lol.

                                Great write up so far and looking forward to the rest of the updates, as well as the finished result.

                                Can't help thinking though, given all the work that you're doing to the truck, was there a reason for not making the flared arches out of steel, it would give you the arches you wanted to your design and stronger than ABS ?

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