Sunday, November 17, 2013

TDI 4Runner Gauges

On past project vehicles, I have always wanted all aftermarket gauges, but never did due to cost. Early on I decided it was going to happen on this 4Runner. There's 8 gauges - oil pressure, pyrometer, boost, volts, RPM, speed, coolant temp, and fuel level. All are AutoMeter except for the Speedhut GPS 0-100 speedometer. I decided to go with Speedhut because they offered what I wanted at a much more affordable price than Autometer. It doesn't match the other gauges perfectly, but it's close enough for me. I'm happy with it. I also added transistor-controlled LEDs for the glow plug and MIL lights, and 2 LEDs for turn signal indicators.

I knew it would be some work to install all these gauges, but I really under estimated it. No idea how many hours I have in the whole setup, but there was a lot of time consumed in making it all look nice, wiring up the lights, powers, grounds, and sensor wires. It was worth it, though; the end result is exactly what I wanted.

Thanks to Alchemist from the TDIClub forums for schematic and Jimbote for bringing it to my attention that I'd need to build this circuit.
Yes, there's heat shrink tubing on each individual wire to keep them from touching each other. The large piece of heat shrink tubing on the outside is to keep the unit stationary and add structural strength.


Friday, November 15, 2013

Seat Bracket Fabrication for Summit Racing Sport Seats

The stock seats in this 4Runner were in rough shape - some stains, some missing chunks of foam in the side bolsters, and they had permastank! Rather than cover it all up with some seat covers, I opted to replace them with Summit Racing's sport seats (SUM-G1159-2). I've looked at those for years and like them, but never had a need for aftermarket seats until now. These seats look great, are comfortable, come with sliders, and appear to be a good value. 

I made my own seat brackets out of flat steel bar stock. The rounded risers are roll cage tubing cut in half. Looks a heck of a lot nicer than box tube. I used a torch to heat and bend the curved front part to match the floor board. The 4Runner floor is not level, so it took quite a bit of measuring to get the seats level and in the correct left/right orientation. Overall I have 7 or 8 hours in these brackets, but the end result are level seats exactly where I want them that are in the correct left/right location and look great. 

I was afraid the side bolsters would be a bit too much for getting in and out, but initially they don't feel too bad. We'll see how it works out. 



Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Intercooler Charge Pipe Fabrication




It's pretty tight between the intercooler and fuel filter, but it all fits with enough room for some engine movement.




I did not leave the intercooler outlet transition like that. I bought more pipe and turned it into a nice smooth bend.

The grill fits nicely after some minor trimming :) I am planning on painting that section of pipe black so it will blend in a little bit better.