-Nemesis- wrote:I would start with the rear and leave the front as is for now, as you said the Lux front can work quiet well.
I sold a Surf chassis to a guy on here (bradchlux or something???) and he did the rear link conversion in a weekend.
All I would suggest to revise on the rear end would be use 80 series trailing arms as opposed to the short Surf/Runner ones. This will soften the arc of the diff's movement and make it more comfortable again, plus easier flex (not that the Runners are bad)
You'll be amazed the ride difference with a coily rear, can't even feel it working off road
Hey mate, i bought a surf chassy off nemesis and changed my hilux rear end from leafs to toyota surf rear coils fairly easily.
Basically to give you an idea, the surf rear end (with rancho's and new coils) flex really well from factory. The only restriction on my coil rear is the length of the shocks and the shorter trailing arms then alot of other setups.
The surf and hilux chassy are almost identical, they are the same width and the curvature of the chassy matches up beautifully. All i did was remove the tray and carefully cut away my leaf spring mounts and cross members, carefully remove the surf cross members and trailing arm mounts...
Then the whole piece dropps out and can be wheeled under the lux chassy and positioned with a few measurements, then basically just welded back on.
Now mine i believe it flexes awesome and have no need to chase more flex but if you wanted you could add 80 series trailing arms (longer) whch would free up the links even more but in my opinion if your gonna do this then you may as well go a complete custom setup.
I chose this because all the arms and mounts are factory toyota hilux and were made for the chassy and it makes engineering really easy as all the geometry is factory and they basically only engineer the welds.
i have heaps of pics of the whole setup from start to finish if you need them but i can up load a couple to give you an idea.
Also because i had the room with being able to remove (was checked by an engineer) the spare wheel holder i tucked up a toyota prado 80L tank.
All in all, has a awsome ride, flexes well and with new tank, coils, shocks it ended up costing me $400 by the time i sold my standard rear end and some stuff off the ifs surf chassy.
Brad
3.0L turbo diesel, 4" lift, bud's front housing, track assasin cv's, air lokker front + Rear, beadlock'd 37 stickies, high steer, 15.5" travel ranchos, high pinion diff and coils on the rear