Samurai rescue project UPDATED!
Samurai rescue project UPDATED!
Vehicle
1989 Suzuki SJ Samurai
Background
After watching a few SJ's on Ebay I purchased this from Derbyshire on the 24th November 2010 for the total of £800. The mileage at the time was 51253. It was the best one on there at the time and exactly fitted my requirements for what i was looking for. It had obviously spent a bit of time on farms and has been used off road and on green lanes. As far as i know all the modifiactions it has is a 2" lift on shackles and Runway AT tyres. Plus the bottom part of the carpet has been removed.
My intentions were to use it exclusively over the winter and during the summer i can use it alongside my other car, having them both insured on limited mileage i can use the anus for off road weekends and use it as a van if need be.
The day i bought it sat in its last owners farmyard
Project aim
I realised that if it were to stay on the road for the next coming winter and next years test it would need some work doing, mainly welding up the usual parts of the bodywork and floorpan. For some reason iv left it a little late as the test is in a few weeks and i havnt started work properly until this afternoon
So intentions are;
- to remove and replace all the metal arch flares with plastic ones. Including any repair work needed to the fixing brackets that come off the body.
Drilled out the original screw heads off for the front arch flare
Accidently grinded off this bracket sorry
- Cut out the sills and replace with box section steel to double up as rock sliders, or another option would be to replace the sill with something standard looking and try and find a way of reusing the original plastic sill trim so it looks more original
As you can see somebody has imaginatively used a piece of bathroom type aparatus to fix the sill trims on and hide this rot
- Cutting out the rear inner arches where it joins to the body around the wheel well and rewelding to make solid once more, it has already had some work done to the NSR but i think it will all have to be cut out and done again more neatly. Thinking about a virtual lift type route
- Repair hole in floor pan at both sides behind the seats around the seatbelt and body mounts
This is the front part of the OSR arch
- Repair OSR section of floor pan aroud fuel filler neck where a rather large hole had appeared
I have only taken pictures of the OFFside so far but the otherside is basically the same, the sills arnt as bad and the rear arch has already been repaired but not very well. I realise that the repair work doesnt have to be spot on because i will continue to use it on lanes and off road sites. I dont do welding myself so im stripping it down as much as possible for a friend of mine to carry out the welding work. This way it minimises the amount of time he spends on it and hance money i have to spend
Thanks for looking so far any comments and suggestions are welcome, i could do with some clever ideas if anyone has any
1989 Suzuki SJ Samurai
Background
After watching a few SJ's on Ebay I purchased this from Derbyshire on the 24th November 2010 for the total of £800. The mileage at the time was 51253. It was the best one on there at the time and exactly fitted my requirements for what i was looking for. It had obviously spent a bit of time on farms and has been used off road and on green lanes. As far as i know all the modifiactions it has is a 2" lift on shackles and Runway AT tyres. Plus the bottom part of the carpet has been removed.
My intentions were to use it exclusively over the winter and during the summer i can use it alongside my other car, having them both insured on limited mileage i can use the anus for off road weekends and use it as a van if need be.
The day i bought it sat in its last owners farmyard
Project aim
I realised that if it were to stay on the road for the next coming winter and next years test it would need some work doing, mainly welding up the usual parts of the bodywork and floorpan. For some reason iv left it a little late as the test is in a few weeks and i havnt started work properly until this afternoon
So intentions are;
- to remove and replace all the metal arch flares with plastic ones. Including any repair work needed to the fixing brackets that come off the body.
Drilled out the original screw heads off for the front arch flare
Accidently grinded off this bracket sorry
- Cut out the sills and replace with box section steel to double up as rock sliders, or another option would be to replace the sill with something standard looking and try and find a way of reusing the original plastic sill trim so it looks more original
As you can see somebody has imaginatively used a piece of bathroom type aparatus to fix the sill trims on and hide this rot
- Cutting out the rear inner arches where it joins to the body around the wheel well and rewelding to make solid once more, it has already had some work done to the NSR but i think it will all have to be cut out and done again more neatly. Thinking about a virtual lift type route
- Repair hole in floor pan at both sides behind the seats around the seatbelt and body mounts
This is the front part of the OSR arch
- Repair OSR section of floor pan aroud fuel filler neck where a rather large hole had appeared
I have only taken pictures of the OFFside so far but the otherside is basically the same, the sills arnt as bad and the rear arch has already been repaired but not very well. I realise that the repair work doesnt have to be spot on because i will continue to use it on lanes and off road sites. I dont do welding myself so im stripping it down as much as possible for a friend of mine to carry out the welding work. This way it minimises the amount of time he spends on it and hance money i have to spend
Thanks for looking so far any comments and suggestions are welcome, i could do with some clever ideas if anyone has any
Last edited by Christoff on Tue Dec 13, 2011 5:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Samurai rescue project
Looking good there mate looks nice and un molested. And to be honest a lot less Rot than most you see about,
Hadrian Panels stock some parts for Sj's specifically sill panels which may be of use too you if your staying wioth the standard look
http://hadrian.dominohosting.biz/hadria ... 04%2F90%29
Box section Sills are all very good but only suitable for jacking if your body mounts are solid.
If it was me id keeping it looking standardish, think they look best with all the trim in place.
Hadrian Panels stock some parts for Sj's specifically sill panels which may be of use too you if your staying wioth the standard look
http://hadrian.dominohosting.biz/hadria ... 04%2F90%29
Box section Sills are all very good but only suitable for jacking if your body mounts are solid.
If it was me id keeping it looking standardish, think they look best with all the trim in place.
Re: Samurai rescue project
Yeah i know what you mean. I think the sills on hadrian or any other panel supplier are all for the 410. Hence they dont have the extra lip for the sill trims on. Although a piece could be made so they fit of course. I do prefer the standard look though. But i also want it to serve a purpose off road, i guess i will have to find a decent middle ground with it
From an earlier thread
From an earlier thread
Christoff wrote:Rear wings are available for SJ410 and are approx £50 each. Downside been that there 410 only so no lip on the edge for the wider flares of a samurai
Rear lower corner piece is available for approx £30
Complete sills are approx £25 each
Re: Samurai rescue project
I was thinking because im going to have to get the new arches sprayed, should i do them myself in black to match the bumpers and sills or have them sprayed in the same grey as the body like standard?
Problem is they might not be able to get a good colour match against the old paint.
Could anyone post pictures of an SJ with the sills been replaced with box section rock sliders so i can get an idea what it would look like?
Problem is they might not be able to get a good colour match against the old paint.
Could anyone post pictures of an SJ with the sills been replaced with box section rock sliders so i can get an idea what it would look like?
Re: Samurai rescue project
Looks liek your going to be busy with the grinder and Mig
If you are careful you can pretty much keep it stock looking with box section sills.
If you are careful you can pretty much keep it stock looking with box section sills.
Re: Samurai rescue project
The top one looks neat, not sure about the black one. Door gap looks a bit suspicious to me ?
Top one looks good as the sill fits flush with the body line if you know what i mean. Do you have any more pictures of the underside along the sill, what size box section is best to use?
I think i would like to use the original plastic sill trims, if another lip was welded along the sill on the top anus, you could reuse the trims
Top one looks good as the sill fits flush with the body line if you know what i mean. Do you have any more pictures of the underside along the sill, what size box section is best to use?
I think i would like to use the original plastic sill trims, if another lip was welded along the sill on the top anus, you could reuse the trims
Re: Samurai rescue project
I dont think the door is closed properly in that pic of the black one
The green one is Sexuki's build http://www.suzukiclubuk.co.uk/phpBB3/ph ... =22&t=2718" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
I think most people use 80x80 box section?
The green one is Sexuki's build http://www.suzukiclubuk.co.uk/phpBB3/ph ... =22&t=2718" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
I think most people use 80x80 box section?
Re: Samurai rescue project
Thanks dude. If i can use some box section to increase strength and also reuse the plastic trims that would be a win. I want the bottom of the arches to match up with the sills so not to ruin the original lines of the anus.
Re: Samurai rescue project
Got loads more done on the anus tonight. All the arches are now removed along with the rear bumper. I developed a quick technique with the drill and got the arches off in about half hour as opposed to 2 hours for the first one
Didn't take pictures because it was dark and pissing it down so I just wanted to get on with it, I'l post some up tomorrow.
I have a problem with the rear lights, it had an earth fault. When I braked they all went out. When I removed them the little earth wire off the back of the bulb has broken off. I think I may need new ones they are all so corroded and weak.
Why arnt there any disconnection points for the rear wiring? Why do they all have to earth individually to different and random places around the chassis? What a mess it is I'm going to have to chop it all out and make a new loom I think.
What can be done about it will I need a new light cluster and then just run new earth wires to a common ground point ?
Didn't take pictures because it was dark and pissing it down so I just wanted to get on with it, I'l post some up tomorrow.
I have a problem with the rear lights, it had an earth fault. When I braked they all went out. When I removed them the little earth wire off the back of the bulb has broken off. I think I may need new ones they are all so corroded and weak.
Why arnt there any disconnection points for the rear wiring? Why do they all have to earth individually to different and random places around the chassis? What a mess it is I'm going to have to chop it all out and make a new loom I think.
What can be done about it will I need a new light cluster and then just run new earth wires to a common ground point ?
Re: Samurai rescue project
Will possibly be needing a nearside rear light cluster if somebody has one with all the wires intact. Can anybody advise on tidying up the wiring around here?