molch wrote:Been reading the forums for a while now but never really posted.Found everyone here a great help though. have a few questions for my muild of a 83 sierra
How mild is it going to be? Judging by the fact that you are going to be putting a fair amount of work into the engine, i'm guessing that you are going to be doing a lot of work to the rest of the car too?
molch wrote:-buying an 85 shell with no rust/rollcage etc to go onto the 83 chassis. The 85 is a 1.3l and the 83 is a 1 litre. any issues here?
Hmm, go to your current 83 body and check behind the front seats above the middle two body mounts (just near the transmission tunnel), if you can see bolt heads there, then i am going to suggest that there may be some messing around required to make the 85 body fit to this car, as the 85 will have captive bolts on the body (you will not see any bolt heads come up through the floor)...
I would suggest this is going to make things a bit fiddly when trying to mount the new body to the old chassis...
Why do you want to use the 83 chassis? why not use the 85 chassis?
molch wrote:-2 inch body lift. was going to use a commercial kit for this. maybe the one from
www.bigballsoffroad.com as they are nylon and shouldn';t squeak as much as steel etc.
when you do the body lift, you should keep the rubber 'washers' that are in the between the body and the chassis (see current body mounts), these will stop the body from squeeking anyways so the nylon arguement is null and void.
As you are trying to mix two different body / chassis setups, you may find it a bit tricky to get a body lift kit that will just bolt straight on in between the two.
Can someone confirm that plastic body lift blocks are legal in NSW? (i gather that's where you are Molch?)
On the plus side, the fellow that runs Big Balls Offroad is on this list - his user name is Liam - perhaps you could ask him.
molch wrote:-maybe a spring lift theres a fair priced kit from Suzisport, dont want ranchos yet as dont have the money for them.
Old man emu springs are definately the G-O... get them from ARB, or your local ARB distributor. However, first decide what size tyre you want to run on your car, as this will affect what suspension setup you need to run, and you may find yourself having to strip it all off again to start fresh if you go too big with the tyres.
If you can't afford ranchos, you should probably drive it around as is until you can afford the setup that you want... no point spending the money twice.
molch wrote:still deciding on motor options. would really like a 4ag/4agze however funds will be the main factor here.
sorry, don't know anything about this motor - though i'm guessing this could be the same motor that a fellow called 'bill' has in his sierra... do a search for 'bill' and you should find some details about it.
molch wrote:Any suggestions tips or advice would be appreciated with this. I know i have just about gone over all topics at once and i've also read alot of alreayd posts from this site.
If money is going to be an issue, decide where this car is going now so that you only have to build it once. this will save money in the long run.
Get it registered first, then do the mods.
Don't forget that once you change your tyres you are going to want to fix the gearing of the car, and as soon as you take it off road you will also want lockers...
molch wrote:Once the car is on the road (all getting done up the central coast of NSW, anyone wanna lend a hand) i'll be hopefully getting out with some guys from here. who knows.
Sorry mate, live in Vic, best i can suggest is that once the car is on the road you should drive it down here
Cheers