Radiator went out on the Cruiser. Luckily I caught it 2 blocks away from home and not in the middle of no where. Otherwise I would have overheated and blew a head gasket and been stranded.
While I was in there, I replaced it with an all metal radiator it was $315 vs the plastic $150. The original plastic one lasted EDIT: 5 years and 22k ** WRONG 20 years (174,000 miles)** and busted at the plastic seams like all plastic radiators. Changing it to the metal one should last a lifetime now. While I was in there I also did the fan clutch, water pump, thermostat and all the heater hoses to silicone. The dreaded pesky heater hose was the worse one. At least I'll never have to do it again because it's now silicone. I also did routine maintenance and replaced the front, center and rear differential fluids with fresh gear oil, changed out the automatic transmission fluid and the power steering fluid. I haven't did jack to this and just drove it since I bought it a year ago. I figured the owner took decent shape of it. That was a bad assumption and it looked like the fluids never been changed or at least haven't been in over 100k or more. Thick black sludge and one of the diffs was foamy! I'm running distilled water in the new radiator right now to circulate through the system. Will flush it completely to remove the green coolant and switch back to factory Toyota Red (long life) coolant which is rated for up to 100k miles. 4 jugs at $15 each aint cheap but it's a hella of a lot cheaper than paying the dealer $25-30 per gallon jug.
Part Numbers:
CSF ALL Metal Radiator 3 Row #2517 $315
HPS Silicone Host Kit HPS-57-14441-BLK + 90 degree gates heater hose to firewall and a 3" straight heater hose to firewall. Pesky Heater Hose (PHH) replaced with the HPS Silicone hose. PHH was as bad as they say it is.
Aisin Water Pump WPT023
Aisin Fan Clutch FCT004
Toyota OEM V-Drive Belts 90913-02353-83
Gates Green Strip AC Belt