Build/activities thread: 1989 Raider, 2010 Sequoia, and my other stuff.

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irish44j

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So where was I?

When I left off, had the basic structure assembled, and then I got some wheel studs for the spare mount. Once I had the tire up there, I found that there was more vibration than I like at the topside of things. I know a lot of Jeep guys set up things to use the factory "bumpstop" on the tailgate to minimize this, so figured I'd try to see how that would work using some old BMW engine mounts that conveniently screwed right into the holes on the door for the OEM spare mount. Tacked up a bracket on the swing-out and tested it out:



The result: better, but still not good. So after some brainstorming about how I could "lock down" the upper section - ruled out a latch (hard to access without some kind of creative pull, and also might rattle). Ruled out other bumpers (urethane, for instance), and did a bit of research on magnets. Sent an email to a magnet seller and showed him this thread. He recommended some neodymium magnets with a 60lb pull force, 10 bucks each. So I ordred a couple and was super-surprised that they weren't as big as expected. But man, they have some pulling power.

Long and short of it, I mounted them on my door-mounted bracket (which I had modified to serve a couple new purposes, including a new antenna mount), like so:



Then built a bracket off the back of the swing-out with a flat steel plate that , when closed, would be right up against the magnet. These mags aren't for pulling from distance, but they have big holding power once in contact:



Then tested....and this turned out to be a great idea. Got rid of 90%+ of the vibration and has enough pulling force to hold the swing-out against the reinforced rear door bracket, but still little enough that you can open the swing-out with a little pull when it's not latched. So pretty pleased with myself on that little thought!

Speaking of latches, after building new brackets top/bottom I put on a De-Sta-Co pull latch just like the one on the smaller swing-out, except this latch is about twice the size (since it's a heavier swing-out). Basically I did things exactly the same as the other side, but bigger lol



I also built a little "ramp and hole" for the spring-pin on the pivot, to hold the swing=out open when it's open....

Ok, so I'm out of sequence here. My original design you saw in the last post had a single-bar lower crossbar. I thought this might have been causing the flex/vibration, so I added a second bar:



In this pic you can also see I had to cut off the crossbar for the Rotopax, since I needed to now relocate them 2" higher up to clear the lower bar (incidentally, the lower bar didn't help with the vibration so it wasn't a very productive effort overall).

I also bought some knockoff Rotopax mounts off Amazon - they're not as good as the real ones, and are for the thinner 1-gallon cans, but figured for cheap they'd be better than my ghetto-fabbed ones that were functional, but inconvenient and really ugly. Tot get some extra length for the 2-gallon cans I have, I added a small extension



And then forgot to take pics of the actual mounts, whoops. But they look like Rotopax mounts, ya know?

So to mount those I had to drill new holes in that C-channel above. Busted out my drill and a fresh bit. Let me note here that for most of my time working, I wear some light welding gloves with leather gauntlets. I was done welding so took them off. So I'm drilling sideways, and of course have to use both hands with some force to keep the bit seated. As the second hole neared the end, the bit caught and broke. I've broken bits before, of course. But in this case, with my weight pushign forward, when it broke I fell forward and the jagged edge went right into my wrist. I noted the gloves earlier b/c if I still had them on this would be a nonstory. Instead, it slashed open my wrist, blood on the floor. Nobody home at the time, so after a couple minutes of panicked wrapping with paper towels, I basically held the wound together and lashed it shut with like 8 of the stretch fabric band-aids. Jumped in my car covered in steel dust and blood and hit the urgent care a couple miles away. I'll spare you the photo I took of it, but in the end I luckily didn't hit the artery (like 1cm away at most) or and tendons, and it just opened 2-3" gash in my arm that required 8 stitches. So.....wear your PPE, folks....even when it doesn't seem like you need it.



WIth that stiched up, of course I got back to work lol....finished those holes, mounted the rotopax, did a few remaining small welding things, and then pulled the swing-out off and gave it a few coats of paint and a coat or two of bedliner. Greased the bearings and installed everything as finished. Bolted on the water tank. Oh didn't mention that. I wnated to put my shower tank on this thing - you can see the flat mount plate on the last post but it's positioned to just barely clear bot the spare tire, the rear wiper, the antenna mount, and the rear glass. Much measuring and planning for sure. IT's set up so I can use it when closed, and when opened the spigot points toward my shower area (right rear of the truck). All in all, I spent a lot of time thinking about how I wanted things to fit, and luckily....they all fit correctly.



So here's the (mostly) finished product with all the accessories and crap bolted up (though I still need to relocate my high-mount 3rd brake light). All in all, no vibration that I can notice, everything fits as intended, and it seems to work fine and looks ok. Still a few ugly welds here and there because I don't take my time as much as I should, but overall looks and functions pretty good.









Now to clean up the garage disaster area, now that the Raider is back in the driveway

 

irish44j

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Fairfax County, VA, USA
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Just to more or less finish up this project - still wanted to reinstall my 3rd brake light (since 80s taillights aren't the best). I had it up high previously, but really couldn't find a good place to put it now, and didn't really want to run wiring to the swing-out, because that's a hassle. So I ended up mounting it on the bottom of the rear door, where it's fully visible by following traffic. plus didn't have to do any new wiring.



 
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irish44j

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So I've been a bit of a bad camp-mate for a while by not hauling my own trash out. Mostly because I'm usually with a friend who has a pickup and is happy to take everyone's trash in an open bed. Because the Raider is small, and trash is smelly inside. So finally got around to getting a trash sack after browsing around the Amazon brands. Yeah, there are some pretty neat track sacks out there, but for my purposes I'm not real interested in paying $100-200 for the real high-quality ones just so I can fill them with trash. So just got one off Amazon for $30 that had good reviews.

it got here today and seems reasonably well-built in terms of material and seams. It has large plastic buckles and adjusters - metal would be better of course, the ones with metal buckles cost a lot more and see above^^. Otherwise, it's your typical Trasheroo-style sack with a pull-cord inner closure and a flap-over buckle closure. This one has some other features - some molle-type stuff on the outside (not that I have anything I want to hang there), a large mesh pocket around the bottom section, a couple large drains, and a nifty little zip-open pocket on the over-flap. I guess a good place to put your empty/new trash bags.



I got the beige one, since I have a lot of beige on this truck. It's definitely bigger than I expected. Maybe all the rigs in the listing online have 35" spare tires or something. But whatever, it's not dragging on the ground or anything lol

(ignore all my awnings and stuff out - today was dry and breezy so a good time to make sure everything is totally dried out after the last trip and its rain/fog)



I stuffed the Porsche's car cover in it just to see how it filled out with a bulky item inside



After thinking about it, I decided the mesh pocket is pretty silly, and will just end up with leaves in it (I park under a big-ass oak tree). I can't think of anything I'd actually put in them, and they're pretty flimsy plastick-y mesh anyhow that doesn't look like it'll hold up all that long. So in the interest of not having things that I have no need for, I just cut them all out. This will also make it easier to clean the canvas itself when I feel like it.



So yeah, that's it for now. Trash sack: acquired.
 

irish44j

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So one thing I've noticed on our last few night (and fog) trips is that my aux lighting up front kind of sucks. It's just some old Hella Ralleye 3000s (halogen) and a cheapy ebay lightbar. Frankly, my nice e-code headlights are probably the best of the bunch. On the last trip I was behind one of the other guys at night who was running some lighting that seemed to have really good depth and spread. After checking it out, it's actually a mid-cheap Chinese brand "Auxlight." Since I don't have the scratch for the real high-end stuff figured I'd give it a go to do a couple replacements.

I do love these Hellas - they came off my competition rally car and are long-range pencil beams, so not really what I need when going 10mph in the woods at night anyhow. I got them for high-speed rally stuff. I'm actually a bit torn about taking them off because I think they really fit the vintage look of this truck, but it's time to move on.



My neighbor is about to get his (recently passed) father's old 80s or early 90s pickup and wants to do some upgrades to it, so I'll probably give them to him since they may look cool on that, depending on what year it is/if it has round headlights.

I also plan to replace the lightbar on the roof - it's pretty so-so and is mostly just close-range spread-out light with no depth. I also hate how it looks. These big lightbars look find on modern trucks, but a bit silly on the old ones, perhaps.

So about $250 later from Amazon, I have three packages from Auxbeam. Upon initial receipt, I've gotta say that this brand has upped its game vs. the usual Amazon cheap LED stuff. The packaging is great quality, and has a full plastic wrap over it. The packing is excellent too. I'll get to the lights themselves in a sec, but one thing I was most impressed with is the harness. Each set comes with a pre-made harness, fully shrink/plastic-wrapped with decently beefy wires inside (not that super-thin gauge stuff that comes embedded in rubber with most Amazon LED lights). Each light has its own good-quality waterproof plug connector (literally identical to the ones on my $$ Diode Dynamics bar on the rally car, IIRC). The rest of the harness is pre-made as well, with in inline fuse and a relay with a shrink-wrapped base and a beefy ground with a ring. At the end is a click-on-click-off button with an adhesive backing. It seems to work fine, but I prefer the old-school metal toggle switches so I won't use it. I'll take a pic of it all later, but overall I'm pretty impressed by the high quality.



As to the lights. So in place of the Hellas I wanted some smaller yellow projector-style LED lights - mostly for all the foggy/rainy nights we always seem to have in the Appalachians where white floods and regular headlights suck. So I got these two-lens 4" ones. The housings have a lot more "heft" than other small floods I've used over the years for various things. I took one of the covers off and the rubber seal seems to be good quality and likely won't leak, but I'll put some silicone around it anyhow just to be sure (again, I dont' think it needs it though). They have a pressure-equalizing/vent valve and overall seem to be good quality. And of course I didn't take any closeup pics (oops, will do later) so here they are installed:



Yeah, they don't quite fit with the look of this truck, but whatever. They'll blend in better once they're dirty lol. I actually didn't use most of the harness they came with, just the pigtail with the nice plugs, since I already have the wirng for the Hellas that are plenty beefy to handle the lower power needs of the LEDs.

The color is a bit more "modern yellow" than I'd hoped for (more like the more "golden" vintage yellow color), but that's modern tech.



Need to figure out what the ideal aim is. As it is, set them up just below the low beams .



So once it got dark, headed a few streets over to one with no streetlights to give them a test. I know it's hard to tell in photos, but they have some pretty excellent reach and enough spread for decent edges (though not full flood). All in all, pretty pleased with these for the $70 or so I paid for them





--

So that's part 1. Part two will be up on the roof. Here's a sneak preview, though not sure exactly how I'm going to set it all up just yet. These lights are even beefier and should do well.



Other minor thing. Recently I noticed my washer fluid was always low. I didn't see any obvious leak (it's an aftermarket reservoir that I've had on there for a couple years), but upon taking it off it had split down the back and was leaking. So that's annoying. Now, the Raider used to have a much larger tank for the headlight washers (not sure why it's so much bigger than the windshield washers, that's strange). I had taken it off since I don't need headlight washers, but figured I could repurpose it for the windshield. After chekcing it out for leaks, tested the beefy OEM washer motor and it worked fine, though it leaked a bit and I had to take it apart and re-seal it. Then extended the wiring from the firewall to it. Only issue was that the headlight washer uses some pretty big tubing (like 3x the size of the windshield washers) for some reason. I didn't have any adaptors handy so I basically dug into my "box of hoses" and found one in-between that fit inside the big hose and then the washer hose fit inside of that. So basically a double step-down hose. I used some waterproof sealant to make sure they stay together and put it back in. So now I have a functional windshield washer again, that isn't leaking, and has about twice the capacity of what I had before. So, little free things are always fun.

 

irish44j

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Quick detour from the Raider. Took my wife on Saturday to pick up some 7' bookshelves that we ordered last month, so took the Sequoia (since it can fit 7' inside). So about 2 blocks from the store the giant red triangle comes on and proclaims "coolant overheat" or something and I look down and the temp gauge is pegged. So I basically coast it to the parking lot and there's coolant pouring everywhere, splattered around all over the engine bay and undercarriage.



I can't tell where the leak is, but from the amount I assumed it must be a cut hose, based on the volume. Annoying since I put new hoses and a new Koyo radiator on it not too long ago. No tools so can't get the skidplate off, and finally write it off to "do this at home." So i call AAA for a flatbed and we load up the bookshelves. Flatbed gets there and I turned on the truck real quick to drive it up the ramp after it had been cooling for an hour...more coolant spitting out.



Got back to my house and as I'm pulling it off (again, 30 secs of engine on so won't hurt anything), more fluid spitting. The tow driver (who had been telling me about his Stage 3 STi the whole drive back) immediately says "yo, sounds like your water pump is shot." Which actually makes sense, upon thinking about it. It hadn't been weeping that I noticed, but I had been hearing a marbles-bearing noise for a good while, which I couldn't locate. Pulled the skid plate off and dumped a gallon of water into the radiator, have my wife turn the truck on while I stand over the engine (with goggles on), and it's immediately clear the water is spraying/flowing out of the water pump bearing/seal area behind the pulley. So, located. New parts on order so hopefully can replace it later this week when I have time. Kind of happy it happened now, since I have to tow the racecar next weekend out to W.Va., which would have been a much worse breakdown situation.

--

Ok, now back to the Raider. LIghting Project #2 - the roof. Never much liked either the performance or the look of the giant 40" LED bar up there. And also the mounting screws long agon stripped and were basically expoxied to stay in, so I was just waiting it to fall off while wheeling someday lol. So pulled that thing off to replace with four of the round-ish lights I showed at the end of the last post. Now, how to mount them. The bar was mounted to two diagonal tabs off the front crossbar of the rack, so why not re-use those (they're pretty beefy, welded on). So I got out a long piece of angle iron and welded some end caps/mounting tabls on each end

(and don't ask me why there's so much random crap on my workbench....)



So this setup will allow me to bolt on the bar at each end with a pair of big M10 torx-head bolts, with enough grip force to hold it in place well but also able to loosen to adjust/rotate the car to raise/lower all the flood lights at once rather than individually. So after measuring for position, I drilled and mounted the light mount brackets (and smaller holes for zipties to secure wiring).



These lights each have their own pigtail with a weatherproof sealed plug. But they come with paired harnesses, and I want them all on one circuit, so did some cutting and splicing to make one pair of plugs (each for two lights), set up to be the right length so I don't have to coil wires and can hide them well, and then used part of the main harness through my roof wiring gland and spliced into the pre-existing wiring/relay/switch I had for the roof bar. ALl this wiring actually took longer than fabbing the mount, of course. One reason I used angle was so I could hide all the wires underneath, so they'd be minimally visible from the front or sides. "Clean" (ish)

So here it is mounted up







I haven't tested them at night yet, but they look pretty bright in broad daylight compared to the old lightbar.

 

MrWilsonWJ

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Looks good, I agree with you that some rigs just look better with round lights. Light bars are nice and all but seem out of place on older stuff. I originally put a light bar on my WJ but immediately took it off and put some cheap-o Amazon round lights on and it looks much better. I've never been real impressed with the lights I put on so I'm interested to see what you think of yours. 5-14-8 (3).jpg
 

irish44j

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Nice. To answer your question: I took it out tonight in to the woodland roads not far from my house to find some darkness. So here's a series of three: First is my E-code H6 regular lowbeams (which are actually quite good). 2nd is lows with the yellow. 3rd is lows with the roof lights. So they look pretty good to me, and have a lot better depth/range than the bar did, for certain.







So pretty happy with all of that. My light bar setup is causing a faint resonance (thanks, roof with hardly any factory insulation), so I may spend a bit of time trying to tone that down, either with some kind of aerodynamics fix, or just by putting some dynamat or something inside the headliner. It's not terrible, but I can definitely notice it.

In other news, dove into fixing the Sequoia. Long story short, the water pump was TOTALLY shot. In fact, I'm amazed it was actually turning at all, the bearing is so destroyed. It's an OEM Toyota pump, but the bolts have some gray RTV on them, so looks like it's been replaced at least once. Other than that, everything else looked fine, and the idler pulley and tensioner pulleys felt fine. I replaced the tensioner anyhow, since my belt kit came with one. (Side story: it actually came with TWO....someone put the wrong parts box in the kit box, since there was supposed to be an idler pulley in there. So that was lame, but the idler in the truck feels perfect anyhow).





No after pics, but I filled and bled the system and looks like everything is fine - temps stayed in the normal range after 20 minutes of "spirited" driving. I'll also say that maybe the water pump has been going out for a LONG time. I've always thought this 5.7 sounded a bit "coarse" compared to the old 4.7, but now with the new pump on there it's a LOT quieter than it's ever been since I've owned it, so I guess it was water pump bearing noise I've been hearing for as long as I can recall. Go figure. With these engines that have a crank-driven fan this huge, it's hard to locate/diagnose engine noises, generally.

A rare driveway-sharing by the trucks...

 

Grit City Paul

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Really enjoying your build thread and customization of the Raider - - great mix of projects and wheeling. Having an oddball rig definitely brings out the "Mad Scientist" / "How can I make this 'Jeep accessory' work. . . .? " mentality which is vastly more entertaining than simply bolting on stuff from a parts catalog . . .

Well done.
 
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irish44j

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Thanks. I was just talking to a coworker with a nicely-setup Jeep (and plenty of CNC-cut Billet stuff) about how I pretty much have to make everything DIY since there's not much aftermarket. And that's specifically why I got this vehicle, honestly. Good parts availability for mechanicals, but not much "accessories" aftermarket. The most fun way to do vehicle builds!
 
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irish44j

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Just a couple small updates. First, the new upper light bar was causing some resonance in the roof. I dealt with this when I first built the rack and had to modify it, and in this case I'm sure it was from the horizontal mount bar having a gap between it and the rack fairing and/or the roof. So as a test, found an old fairing I used on this truck back in the day, and slotted it around the light mounts and bolted it to the crossbar (with some old hose as a bumper on the roof middle). Long story short, it works great, got rid of all the resonance and may have actually reduced the wind noise from BEFORE the lights, though it's hard to say for sure. In any case, another free mod that pays dividends...





Also saw this. This old Jeep is at the local McDonald's at like 8am every morning. An elderly guy drives it and lives somewhere near me, but no idea where. Sad to see it on a flatbed, hope it's nothing too bad.



Er, what else. Oh, it seems the magnet on the swing-out is working, but on hard bumps it still kind of pulls off and then bangs back, so I added a second one to double the force. Seems to hold better. We'll see once I actually get it offroad and not just hitting local manhole covers and stuff on our very excellent roads here....

This is mildly O/T, but my fuel pump on the e30 failed at the last rallycross of the season and I couldn't push it up the driveway from my trailer (foot injury). So used the Raider, which I've used to push it up before. Except that was before I put the new springs/torsion bars on and now it's a couple inches higher....to high to catch the bumper. It was too late before I noticed.....



The Sequoia was out getting dirty too at the rallycross, as was my Mighty Max trailier, hauling cones and gear since our club van wasn't available.



And a rallycar shot from last weekend, just because it's cooler than most of my 4x4 shots

 

Grit City Paul

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Thanks. I was just talking to a coworker with a nicely-setup Jeep (and plenty of CNC-cut Billet stuff) about how I pretty much have to make everything DIY since there's not much aftermarket. And that's specifically why I got this vehicle, honestly. Good parts availability for mechanicals, but not much "accessories" aftermarket. The most fun way to do vehicle builds!
Yup, maybe not as rare as a Raider, but plenty of fab on this 1st Gen Explorer. . .
Moab.2 (MAY 23).jpg

Paul
 
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irish44j

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Little project today as I was also ordering some stuff for a slightly bigger project. You may recall that at the far rear driver's side corner I originally just had a strange "basket" thing. I originally made it to hold muddy boots, or other stuff, but in truth it wasn't very useful, didn't fit things very well, and just became a "junk box" of sorts. This thing:



So let's get rid of that. Chop chop of the wire-shelf sides, and built a frame out of angle iron, including a crossbar.



I wanted to clearance for the fire extinguisher, a shelf, and a standard gallon oil jug. Here's my "set clearance" technique:



Then found an old piece of stainless steel sheet (didnt' need stainless, but didn't have any mild steel) and made a professional-grade template for the shelf



SHELF. This is welded in, but remember, I can take this entire shelf unit thing out as one piece if I need to for some reason, so it's just part of that



After that, needed to figure out a door. I found a couple 12" piano hinges from an old project, and a big-ass aluminum street sign that's been sitting in my garage for years. Since I can't weld aluminum here, I had to do it the "old" way with rivets. After some cutting and shaping, and placing some rubber weatherstrip to get rid of any rattling, here it is installed, with extinguisher, first-aid kit, jug of oil, and (just for testing) my electric air pump (I usually carry a much bigger Viair on trail, so won't have the Dewalt one there...)



On the outside I put the mounts for my axe, way more convenient place for it than the other strange places I had it previously.



So all in all, that came out pretty damn good for a 4-hour project, and cost me exactly nothing in materials. I do need to figure out a latch setup for it - something that's quick-open (not a screw-in knob) since the emergency gear is in there. Though I should probably move the extinguisher someplace other than the back, since now to get to it I have to open both swing-outs, the rear door, and this compartment. Which seems like a lot if something's on fire, eh?

Next project will be my single biggest expenditure for this built (outside of tires), I think. Kind of a XMas present to myself, of sorts. It may require some customization as well, TBD. That will be in a week or two.
 
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irish44j

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Yeah. There was a point where I intended to put the extinguisher down in front of the driver's seat for quick access and I kind of forgot about it, but I think it's time to get that done for sure!

Hatchet won't fit inside that space well, unfortunately. It's too long (I tried). And I totally hear you with regard to flying objects in a wreck (there is a LOT of attention to that in my competition rally car, after someone took a fire extinguisher to the helmet when they did a roll through some trees a while back). That said, the mounts are for much heavier tools (like a full-size axe) and the hatchet really couldn't possibly have sufficient momentum to break out of them, from a strictly physics POV. Also, that panel is slanted (hard to tell) so it couldn't have a straight path to the driver anyhow. And it's in a locking sheath. So probably not worth being spooked about. My old location for it was WAY worse from that point of view, haha.

That said, another near-future project will totally mitigate your concerns anyhow - either by giving me a new place to relocate it to, or simply providing a "wall" of sorts to prevent any problem of flying stuff.

Also that thing about me doing all this in an 80s tiny SUV with no real safety in its design or handing ;)

But yeah, thanks for the thoughts - you definitely have me thinking about that stuff now, and that's good!
 
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Grit City Paul

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Also that thing about me doing all this in an 80s tiny SUV with no real safety in its design or handing ;)
^ ^ ^ ^
Awesome truthful statement. . .

Have this on my door jamb threshold . . .
Air Bags (DEC 23).jpg
Not to hi-jack, my build thread tag line starts out "Three ashtrays, two doors, one cupholder, zero airbags. . ."

Great work.
 

irish44j

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Yes, I would get the fire extinguisher mounted in a more accessible location, and the hatchet inside of that space you enclosed. I've heard of very bad things happening in car accidents and that location has me spooked a little. Looks great though!
ok, I'll go 1-for-2 with you :)
 

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irish44j

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Continuing on with my "master plan" for making this little truck more convenient for camping and fitting stuff correctly. For the last year I've been using two footlockers for various gear, and a mix-match of different storage bins, toolboxes, etc. that never quite fit. FItting stuff in a truck this small is basically Tetris, so things need to fit better to maximize space.

So usually I have a box with some small spare suspension parts, my big bottle jack (I hate hi-lifts), spare belts, and some other stuff. This box is about 3-4" wider than it needs to be to fit well, and just too tall to stack my nuts+bolts+small parts bin on it and get it under the sleepign platform. So after measuring and scouring Amazon, I got this pretty cheap DeWalt box that was the right dimensions for both factors. It came in today, and I'm a bit annoyed that it has a different stacking/lockdown tabs than my other DeWalt bins and stuff - WTF Dewalt, why do you need two different systems when the old one worked great?? Well, improv'ing a bit, I just stacked it and used a ratchet strap to hold the other one on top, fk it. More importantly, together they're a perfect fit in the space i want them to go, at the forward end of the sleeping platform, since I don't need to regularly access this stuff (hopefully)



So that leaves all this space under the other platform (uncarpeted).



I've been stuffing various things in here over the last year, but as I've refined my roof/side storage it's not as useful any more. So I think it's finally time to invest in something that fits that space better:



:)

Most of the guys I camp/wheel with have gotten fridges this year, and while I generally don't have the budget for them I've gotten more and more annoyed to have to get ice, lose a lot of space filling the cooler with ice, and ending up with cold food and drinks sloshing around by day 2 or 3. This is also the case on long road/towing trips in the Sequoia and family trips. So figured I'd pick up a small fridge (this one is 20L) that can do triple-duty. I'm going to run it off car power and also use a Jackery 500 for overnights, etc. The Jackery is expected as a Christmas present, so fingers crossed my wife gets the right one , though if she gets the 600 or 1000 that would be ok too lol. I'd have liked a larger one, but just can't make it fit without other compromises, and frankly I'm usually camping "just me" in the rig and usually only 1-3 days, so it should be enough to keep some meats, condiments, drinks, etc. in. I may still carry a small normal cooler just for drinks while actually on the road. Also, the APL20 is the right price for me: fairly inexpensive, relatively-speaking.

Obviously with my limited space, I had to do a lot of measuring. So this thing + the Jackery should perfectly fit just behind the tool bin earlier in this post, with about 3" overhead to spare. But dragging this pretty thing in and out seems barbaric, so I ordered a Setpower slider off Amazon. It's slightly larger than this cooler, so I can mount the Jackery on it and slide them in/out together, hopefully. That won't be here until next week, and I'm going to have to figure out the mounting sine the floor of this truck is "ribbed" like a pickup bed, but shouldn't be too hard. So, hopefully this all works out as imagined, and in the space required. I *may* have to chop off the left-side rear leg of my platform for clearance for the slider tray (I can move it outward about 2" by my measurements), but I'll have to wait until I get it to know for sure if my measurements are precise. Unfortuantely the wheel-well side of the rear floor isn't totally straight, so it's hard to tell exactly what the best orientation will be. To be continued......
 
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