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Pebble Pounder
I figure I should do a quick (but long winded) build thread on my latest project. Its certainly not to the level of some builds, and documentation is my least favorite thing to do, but never the less here goes.
I started with a used Element Sendero HD slider/chassis I found on Ebay. Pictures showed it was in good shape and little used as there were not many scratches on normally heavy wear surfaces. Sorry no pictures of just the slider but you all know what it looks like.
Then I added the Element IFS2 kit. Also no pictures (did I tell you I am not a fan of documenting stuff).
Everybody does Toyota's for their IFS builds but my 1984 Toyota truck had a solid axle and honestly I am more of a car person than a truck person. So for the body I decided on the ProLine VW Beetle body (link) since Beetles were one of the most modified into whatever crazy thing you could think of in history.
Then since the bug body was going to present tire clearance issues more than truck bodies I went with ProLine BFG Krawler Class 1 tires on black 1.9 imitation Method wheels (I didn't realize they were knockoffs until after I got them and somebody else posted pics of the real thing).
Anyway, the real build starts after getting the rolling chassis together with the body mounted since no off the shelf bumpers were going to really match up to the body. So I decided to make front and rear bumpers and might as well do the sliders as well.
Started with getting the body cut, tires clearanced and then the sliders. Made with 3/16" steel round rod and 1/4" steel square rod dremel sandeddown to 6mm to fit the stock Element side plates. Mig welded and cleaned up.
Then I moved onto the front bumper which I started by using Scale Metal Supply bumper tabs and made a wood jig to bend the 3/16" rod to proper shape 4 times (2 for the front and 2 for the back).
Bent lower tube with Harbor Freight tubing bender and mocked it up with magnets to figure out cutting off the mount tabs:
MIG'd this together and cleaned it up like the sliders and moved onto the rear. Rear was almost identical. Difference is I had to make offset mounting brackets out of 1/2"x1/8" steel plate to drop the bumper height to help clear the body as well as keep front and rear at similar height from the ground. I still had to clearance the body a bit but it looks like the cutouts on real VW Beetles where the exhaust pipes came out so win for a bit of realism (though the real bumper protruded through the body, oh well). I don't have pictures before paint but after everything was welded together, fit and cleaned up I painted everything with rattle can truck bed liner.
So then I got the body painted and went out and tried it out on my backyard rocks before I even got the overspray film off.
More in next post
I started with a used Element Sendero HD slider/chassis I found on Ebay. Pictures showed it was in good shape and little used as there were not many scratches on normally heavy wear surfaces. Sorry no pictures of just the slider but you all know what it looks like.
Then I added the Element IFS2 kit. Also no pictures (did I tell you I am not a fan of documenting stuff).
Everybody does Toyota's for their IFS builds but my 1984 Toyota truck had a solid axle and honestly I am more of a car person than a truck person. So for the body I decided on the ProLine VW Beetle body (link) since Beetles were one of the most modified into whatever crazy thing you could think of in history.
Then since the bug body was going to present tire clearance issues more than truck bodies I went with ProLine BFG Krawler Class 1 tires on black 1.9 imitation Method wheels (I didn't realize they were knockoffs until after I got them and somebody else posted pics of the real thing).
Anyway, the real build starts after getting the rolling chassis together with the body mounted since no off the shelf bumpers were going to really match up to the body. So I decided to make front and rear bumpers and might as well do the sliders as well.
Started with getting the body cut, tires clearanced and then the sliders. Made with 3/16" steel round rod and 1/4" steel square rod dremel sandeddown to 6mm to fit the stock Element side plates. Mig welded and cleaned up.
Then I moved onto the front bumper which I started by using Scale Metal Supply bumper tabs and made a wood jig to bend the 3/16" rod to proper shape 4 times (2 for the front and 2 for the back).
Bent lower tube with Harbor Freight tubing bender and mocked it up with magnets to figure out cutting off the mount tabs:
MIG'd this together and cleaned it up like the sliders and moved onto the rear. Rear was almost identical. Difference is I had to make offset mounting brackets out of 1/2"x1/8" steel plate to drop the bumper height to help clear the body as well as keep front and rear at similar height from the ground. I still had to clearance the body a bit but it looks like the cutouts on real VW Beetles where the exhaust pipes came out so win for a bit of realism (though the real bumper protruded through the body, oh well). I don't have pictures before paint but after everything was welded together, fit and cleaned up I painted everything with rattle can truck bed liner.
So then I got the body painted and went out and tried it out on my backyard rocks before I even got the overspray film off.
More in next post
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