johngottfredson
Threat Level Midnight
- Location
- Alpine
Current condition:
So, I guess its about time I started documenting what I'm doing with my 80 series. I'll start with my background, vehicle ownership history, broad goals, then goals specific to this vehicle.
I grew up in Utah, spent most of high school skipping class to go 4 wheeling or dirt biking or camping. I love the outdoors, and I enjoy exploring new places. In high school I drove a '91 1st gen Montero, which I absolutely loved. I have memories of loading up with 3 friends, throwing the bikes on top, and cruising down to moab at 85 mph at 2 in the morning, sleeping at the slickrock campground, and waking up early enough to not have to pay the morning ranger The thing was stock with some BFG A/T's, and it was a great wheeler, super utilitarian. Loved it.
After my mission I drove a '93 Montero SR. Again, lots of moab and camping experiences, went everywhere I wanted to go. Loved my Monteros, and the wagon platform.
My next 4WD vehicle was a new '04 tacoma SR5. Loved this truck, except the stick shift. Hated the stick. I was working in construction at the time and thought I needed to upgrade to something bigger, so I traded in for a new '05 Ram 1500. Worst. Decision. Ever.
Sold the Dodge after a year and picked up a buddy's '01 Isuzu Trooper. I was thrilled to be back in a wagon, and the Trooper was awesome. However, I had begun to learn about lifts, lockers, etc, and quickly decided that the Isuzu was going to be really hard to modify, so I sold it to my brother, and picked up a Chevy truck for a DD, and bought a sweet little Samurai for the trails.
It had the 1.3L motor from a sidekick, ARB rear locker, lock right front, 33" M/T, toyota springs, 6:1 T-case, removable hard top, and a bunch of other little things I can't remember. This was a fun little truck! Tips over, just pick it back up, no problem. Would clime up a brick wall. However, after a while driving at a top speed of 35 mph got too old, and I realized I'm more of the exploring type, and less of the rock crawling type. Sold it and picked up a '95 Land Cruiser.
With my buddy Marshall Haglund from Utah Powdercoatings, we yanked the fender flares, built custom front and rear bumpers, which taught me that I would probably never do that again. It took so much time! and the end product didn't look as clean as some of the production options out there, though it was a good experience. I can't find any photos of my bumpers, so I'm going to modify my statement to say that they were epic, awesome, and you would all be very impressed.
So, I guess its about time I started documenting what I'm doing with my 80 series. I'll start with my background, vehicle ownership history, broad goals, then goals specific to this vehicle.
I grew up in Utah, spent most of high school skipping class to go 4 wheeling or dirt biking or camping. I love the outdoors, and I enjoy exploring new places. In high school I drove a '91 1st gen Montero, which I absolutely loved. I have memories of loading up with 3 friends, throwing the bikes on top, and cruising down to moab at 85 mph at 2 in the morning, sleeping at the slickrock campground, and waking up early enough to not have to pay the morning ranger The thing was stock with some BFG A/T's, and it was a great wheeler, super utilitarian. Loved it.
After my mission I drove a '93 Montero SR. Again, lots of moab and camping experiences, went everywhere I wanted to go. Loved my Monteros, and the wagon platform.
My next 4WD vehicle was a new '04 tacoma SR5. Loved this truck, except the stick shift. Hated the stick. I was working in construction at the time and thought I needed to upgrade to something bigger, so I traded in for a new '05 Ram 1500. Worst. Decision. Ever.
Sold the Dodge after a year and picked up a buddy's '01 Isuzu Trooper. I was thrilled to be back in a wagon, and the Trooper was awesome. However, I had begun to learn about lifts, lockers, etc, and quickly decided that the Isuzu was going to be really hard to modify, so I sold it to my brother, and picked up a Chevy truck for a DD, and bought a sweet little Samurai for the trails.
It had the 1.3L motor from a sidekick, ARB rear locker, lock right front, 33" M/T, toyota springs, 6:1 T-case, removable hard top, and a bunch of other little things I can't remember. This was a fun little truck! Tips over, just pick it back up, no problem. Would clime up a brick wall. However, after a while driving at a top speed of 35 mph got too old, and I realized I'm more of the exploring type, and less of the rock crawling type. Sold it and picked up a '95 Land Cruiser.
With my buddy Marshall Haglund from Utah Powdercoatings, we yanked the fender flares, built custom front and rear bumpers, which taught me that I would probably never do that again. It took so much time! and the end product didn't look as clean as some of the production options out there, though it was a good experience. I can't find any photos of my bumpers, so I'm going to modify my statement to say that they were epic, awesome, and you would all be very impressed.
Last edited: