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coily rear in a lux
Moderators: toaddog, Elmo, DUDELUX
coily rear in a lux
first and foremost i dont own a TOYOTA my mate does.
apart from a strange choice of 4b he is also computer illiterate,so here goes he owns a hilux,he has been told you can put coils in the rear i searched back through the last ten pages and found no reference or threads.
my is can this be done and how hard is it.
any help would be .
apart from a strange choice of 4b he is also computer illiterate,so here goes he owns a hilux,he has been told you can put coils in the rear i searched back through the last ten pages and found no reference or threads.
my is can this be done and how hard is it.
any help would be .
LIFE BEGINS AT 35 DEGREES.
Hi hookedonsuzi!
Take a look at this link:
http://www.4lux.net/index.php?set_albumName=album82&option=com_gallery&Itemid=&include=view_album.php
This guy did a complete coil conversion on his lux.
Maybe a help...
Michael
Take a look at this link:
http://www.4lux.net/index.php?set_albumName=album82&option=com_gallery&Itemid=&include=view_album.php
This guy did a complete coil conversion on his lux.
Maybe a help...
Michael
hookedonsuzi
Posted: Thu Jan 13, 2005 8:55 pm
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
first and foremost i dont own a TOYOTA my mate does.
apart from a strange choice of 4b he is also computer illiterate,so here goes he owns a hilux,he has been told you can put coils in the rear i searched back through the last ten pages and found no reference or threads.
my is can this be done and how hard is it.
any help would be .
PM me with your email and I'll send you some pics of mine
Where the f#@k did that come from
HiluxMichael wrote:Hi hookedonsuzi!
Take a look at this link:
http://www.4lux.net/index.php?set_albumName=album82&option=com_gallery&Itemid=&include=view_album.php
This guy did a complete coil conversion on his lux.
Maybe a help...
Michael
yes but radius arms front and rear, good for a touring rig/mild wheeler
http://www.budscustoms.com.au
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Custom Parts & Fabrication!
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Custom Parts & Fabrication!
Ph: 0417 708 598
benno_from_brizvegas wrote:hey bubs do you know anything about the legalities of coil conversion in qld?
just curious
benno
It can be engineered
http://www.budscustoms.com.au
Like us and follow on facebook for up to date information of what we are working on and great random specials!
Custom Parts & Fabrication!
Ph: 0417 708 598
Like us and follow on facebook for up to date information of what we are working on and great random specials!
Custom Parts & Fabrication!
Ph: 0417 708 598
4wd monthly did a writeup on a guy in Toowoomba that did coil conversions (mind you they stil kept the main leaf spring as a way of locating the diff) so you might want to check that out it was quite a while ago that i saw it though..
R.I.P. Darryl "DAZZA" Mutch 02/08/1978 - 26/08/2012 aged 34 years ... You will be missed my little brother.
http://www.outerlimits4x4.com/viewtopic.php?f=16&t=39190&start=150
http://www.outerlimits4x4.com/viewtopic.php?f=16&t=39190&start=150
HiluxMichael wrote:bubs wrote:
yes but radius arms front and rear, good for a touring rig/mild wheeler
you´re right - but it works in all the bunderas
(this is my brothers LJ73)
it doesn't work very well in bunderas (or any vehicle with that set up) - there is significant binding inherent in the 3-link leading/training arm setup, and it will never articulate well. quite comfortable for touring and reasonable articulation (bunderas make about 700 on a 20 degree ramp in stock form) for mild 4-wheeling but never any good for hardcore. If you're making the swap to improve articulation this is NOT the way to go. 3 link rear wih a-frame or 4 link, and a 5 link front is probably the easiest to set up with maximum articulation.
Free air locker to the first 20 callers!
coily rear lux.
ok guys this got way of track.
is this a good conversion or not.
ok it can be engineered and can be done.
is it worth it,how hard is it.
any idea on costs.
bubs please reply.
regards hooked.
is this a good conversion or not.
ok it can be engineered and can be done.
is it worth it,how hard is it.
any idea on costs.
bubs please reply.
regards hooked.
LIFE BEGINS AT 35 DEGREES.
Re: coily rear lux.
hookedonsuzi wrote:
is this a good conversion or not.
this is like asking if apples are good or not. if you want coils, yes it's good. to make it work well you need to do it right (4/5 link or A frame, not radius arms bundera style).
is it worth it,how hard is it.
once again this is a very subjective question - it will be worth it to some and not to others, and it will be hard for some, and not for others. it is worth it if you think spending the money and doing the work is worth the improvement in ride and articulation. If you can measure, cut, drill, weld etc, and have the necessary tools, then it's not so hard. If you have a hacksaw and a hand drill then you have an uphill battle.
any idea on costs.
once again depends on your skill level and what you are going to have to pau someone else to do. For a shop to do it all, you're looking at anything in the $1200 - $2000 ballpark, drive in drive out, before engineering. If you have the tools and skills to do it yourself, you could get it down to a few hundred, especially if you can get parts cheaply from wreckers etc.
troll through the members section and find the guys who have done it, ask them how they did it and whay it cost them, then make up your own mind what it will cost and whether or not its worth it - they aren't the sort of questions someone else can answer for you.
cheers
Brian
Free air locker to the first 20 callers!
Re: coily rear lux.
hookedonsuzi wrote:ok guys this got way of track.
is this a good conversion or not.
ok it can be engineered and can be done.
is it worth it,how hard is it.
any idea on costs.
bubs please reply.
regards hooked.
1st of what is the lux being used for
I am doing a double trianglulated 4 link in my hilux 1982, only because I was running the V8 I was worried about axle wrap with the leaf springs and because I didn't want the bus wheel base I had 117"
It is hard to design a coil setup that will work I wont know till I drive it how it will perform but on paper it should be fine
Cost, can your mate weld or fabricate if you had to pay a shop it would guess at least a figure of $2000, I have $48 in bushes, $200 in steel and $50 in springs and about 15hrs in mine
http://www.budscustoms.com.au
Like us and follow on facebook for up to date information of what we are working on and great random specials!
Custom Parts & Fabrication!
Ph: 0417 708 598
Like us and follow on facebook for up to date information of what we are working on and great random specials!
Custom Parts & Fabrication!
Ph: 0417 708 598
I'm doin mine with an A frame out of a Range Rover, rangie coils, coil seats, only have to fab brackets to mount this to, will prob invest in an adjustable panhard and some 3rds trailing arms , will prob end up around 600 for conversion all up.
Try not to let your mind wander...It is too
small and fragile to be out by itself.
small and fragile to be out by itself.
professor wrote:you could do it like this.
You know try biting off more than you can chew.IM STILL CHEWING
Do your home work!!!!!!
hey Prof, are they the same silverstone tyres that AnthonyP blew up and had replaced under warranty? they sound scary...
nice fab work.
cheers
Brian
Free air locker to the first 20 callers!
dumbdunce wrote:professor wrote:you could do it like this.
You know try biting off more than you can chew.IM STILL CHEWING
Do your home work!!!!!!
hey Prof, are they the same silverstone tyres that AnthonyP blew up and had replaced under warranty? they sound scary...
nice fab work.
cheers
Brian
Not sure Hope they hold up.
I'v only done a few trips on them.
Wont matter though they are only going to be a rental set of tyres anyway I'm getting a set of 38 boggers for the lux.
Now back to the thread! the double triangle 4 link is great, even better with the coil overs.
All 5 link gear is over rated there is only one advantage with 5 link and that is the ability to adjust castor for big lifts. thay still bind up as much as the normal radious arms.But up untill now this was the only way to have a front end set up(other than a 4 link in the front)
Having said that there is now a solution to all radious arm binding( other than a 4 link in the front) that will do away with 5 links and the problem of binding.
Keep on eye on my rig in the next few months
This will be big and I'm excited to have the first rig eva to have this patent.
professor wrote:
All 5 link gear is over rated there is only one advantage with 5 link and that is the ability to adjust castor for big lifts. thay still bind up as much as the normal radious arms
this is a ridiculous claim. have you SEEN the articulation difference between the front and rear of an 80 series or GU/GQ? all the binding in a 5 link setup is due to the design of the linkage ends - in the case of patrol and landcruiser, it is limited by the available twist and crush in the rubber eye bushes, but if you example you changed the bush ends for rose joints (or even just undo the bolts a turn so the end bush crush sleeves are free to turn!), flex from a five link is limited only by the physical limitations of links hitting each other, tyres hitting the chassis/body etc, as with a triangulated 4 link.
the radius arm setup on patrol/80 series front, bundera front and rear, relies entirely on crush and twist in the extremely stiff axle-to-control arm bushes for its minimal flex - the setup is designed almost entirely for on-road control at minimal cost. if you replaced the bushes with rose joints, articulation would be reduced to near zero as there would be no compression available in the joints. if you want to see what the binding on this setup is doing in a practical, measurable way, ramp a stock 80 or patrol (on a ramp or a pile of dirt, it doesn't matter), then back it up, pull out one (just one, from one side, leave the other side alone) of the front-most leading arm to axle mounting bolts, then ramp it again, preferable with the removed bolt on the low side.
I'm not discounting the fact that 4 link setups are great for articulation, and the advantage they inherently have over 5-links is they are symmetrical, but they are difficult to fit in front, and *will* have bump- and flex- steer issues when used on a steering axle, no matter how well you set it up (unless you go full hydro), whereas a 5 link, properly set up, will have almost zero flex- or bump-steer.
cheers
Brian
Free air locker to the first 20 callers!
dumbdunce wrote:professor wrote:
All 5 link gear is over rated there is only one advantage with 5 link and that is the ability to adjust castor for big lifts. thay still bind up as much as the normal radious arms
this is a ridiculous claim. have you SEEN the articulation difference between the front and rear of an 80 series or GU/GQ? all the binding in a 5 link setup is due to the design of the linkage ends - in the case of patrol and landcruiser, it is limited by the available twist and crush in the rubber eye bushes, but if you example you changed the bush ends for rose joints (or even just undo the bolts a turn so the end bush crush sleeves are free to turn!), flex from a five link is limited only by the physical limitations of links hitting each other, tyres hitting the chassis/body etc, as with a triangulated 4 link.
the radius arm setup on patrol/80 series front, bundera front and rear, relies entirely on crush and twist in the extremely stiff axle-to-control arm bushes for its minimal flex - the setup is designed almost entirely for on-road control at minimal cost. if you replaced the bushes with rose joints, articulation would be reduced to near zero as there would be no compression available in the joints. if you want to see what the binding on this setup is doing in a practical, measurable way, ramp a stock 80 or patrol (on a ramp or a pile of dirt, it doesn't matter), then back it up, pull out one (just one, from one side, leave the other side alone) of the front-most leading arm to axle mounting bolts, then ramp it again, preferable with the removed bolt on the low side.
I'm not discounting the fact that 4 link setups are great for articulation, and the advantage they inherently have over 5-links is they are symmetrical, but they are difficult to fit in front, and *will* have bump- and flex- steer issues when used on a steering axle, no matter how well you set it up (unless you go full hydro), whereas a 5 link, properly set up, will have almost zero flex- or bump-steer.
cheers
Brian
I will say it again All 5 link gear is over rated and thats
my opinion
who the hell said i was changing the rubbers for rose joints
Quote
If you replaced the bushes with rose joints, articulation would be reduced to near zero as there would be no compression available in the joints
It is the same for 5 links!!!!!!!!!
If you do the math and look at it you still have 4 points mounted to the diff the same or simular to your stock setup(80 off the show room floor)
so that means you are relying on the flex of your rubbers on the ends of your links to allow movement(that is if you have rubbers) i must agree that the 5 link is better than the standard radious setup but not by much!!!!
Quote
if you want to see what the binding on this setup is doing in a practical, measurable way, ramp a stock 80 or patrol (on a ramp or a pile of dirt, it doesn't matter), then back it up, pull out one (just one, from one side, leave the other side alone) of the front-most leading arm to axle mounting bolts, then ramp it again, preferable with the removed bolt on the low side.
Try doing the same with your 5 link undo one of the bolts and i bet the hole wont line up when you drive up on some dirt
All this is a known fact and the 5 link was the only answer up untill now.
I will keep you all posted!
Chad
cbr wrote:Da Lux wrote:anyone know if u could get a coil rear legal in wa
Not sure, but I will be trying in the near future. WA laws suck I would think that you would need to do a lane chage test to get it approved.
Chris.
Could just a stiffer set of springs help out in a lane change test???
Meldge...
86' Landcruiser - MWB Soft Top
Kustom, Kustom and more Kustom to Kome,
Store bought is not as fun...
[quote="Meldge"]Not too long, not to short, it's Middy - It's Just right... :armsup:[/quote]
86' Landcruiser - MWB Soft Top
Kustom, Kustom and more Kustom to Kome,
Store bought is not as fun...
[quote="Meldge"]Not too long, not to short, it's Middy - It's Just right... :armsup:[/quote]
pm 1madengineer on here and he will be able to point u in the right direction.
Chris
Chris
Outers & Arms up stickers coming soon you hungry bitches!
http://www.myultimate4wd.com
http://www.myultimate4wd.com
GRIMACE wrote:How I miss the days of care free wheelin with the crews!
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