I dropped off the radar again for awhile. This build thread used to be called "first attempt at buggy build". I drove the mosquito up and down the street for the first time today. I've been waiting for four months on OTT Industries for my t-case adapter and I finally got fed up and bought a used Kicker 2 adapter from a guy in Wyoming. It was a good move. It came with a 1.8:1 sidekick crawl box attached to a 4:1 toyota t-case, putting my crawl ratio at about 125:1 and giving me 12 gears to choose from. I LOVE it. The buggy is by no means finished. I still need a rear drive shaft, panels, guages, floor, winch wiring, skid plate, steering stops, shifter (I was shifting with a pair of vise grips on the shift cable during the test run), etc.
I ran into a major problem that I can't believe I missed. The front axle housing was bent pretty bad and I just figured that out. It was causing the longfield bell to rub the inside of the knuckle ball. i had to cut and re-weld the knuckle ball onto the housing to get everything to line up. I guess that's the price of buying used stuff:-\.
The thing I'm really excited about is that with the heavy stuff all installed in the buggy, I can still lift a rear tire off the ground by myself--and I'm not a big guy. Based on that, I'm estimating that the rear end as a whole can't weigh more than 500 pounds. And the front can't be over 1200 pounds. I haven't weighed the whole rig yet, but it might just come in at WELL under 2000 pounds which was my target weight.
Here are some pics of me driving it. It felt really good--low to the ground and stable. The power is ok too considering having 39's and a 1.6L mill.
I ran into a major problem that I can't believe I missed. The front axle housing was bent pretty bad and I just figured that out. It was causing the longfield bell to rub the inside of the knuckle ball. i had to cut and re-weld the knuckle ball onto the housing to get everything to line up. I guess that's the price of buying used stuff:-\.
The thing I'm really excited about is that with the heavy stuff all installed in the buggy, I can still lift a rear tire off the ground by myself--and I'm not a big guy. Based on that, I'm estimating that the rear end as a whole can't weigh more than 500 pounds. And the front can't be over 1200 pounds. I haven't weighed the whole rig yet, but it might just come in at WELL under 2000 pounds which was my target weight.
Here are some pics of me driving it. It felt really good--low to the ground and stable. The power is ok too considering having 39's and a 1.6L mill.