Mounting up my aluminum radiator. It is a 24x19 2-row about 3" thick. I elected to mount it an an angle to make room for the intake and a winch. To compensate it is very tall and sits below frame level, it is also almost as wide as the frame rails.
I spent a lot of time thinking up ways to mount the rad. Go back to a stock setup where the rad is secured only to the body or mount it to the frame like a CJ Jeep. I was only really positive I couldn't mount it to both.
The big issue with body mounting was the extent of fabrication would be required, plus my front clip is all cut out, along with the body mounts. I would have to rebuild the front section with enough strength to hold the big rad plus somehow integrate new bodymounts.
The issue with frame mounting was how to support the bracketry on the top of the rad plus how to anchor the right side of the rad near the steering box hardware.
It got alot simpler when I just broke it down to parts, one was build something that by itself would hold the rad, teh second was build a mount for that bracket. It made it alot simpler by breaking into two stages.
Here is the mount. It is all 1/8 angle. 1" on sides, 1/2" on top and 3/4" on bottom.
It is very tight to the tanks and the bottom piece is just long enough to hold the core from sliding.
I wanted to make the brackets so that when removed, you could literally slide the rad up and out. Welded studs make it easier also. This top bracket I ground to make a wedge on one side so the tighter you wrench it the closer the core is pulled into the bracket.
Here's the side brackets. Again minimal tools required and easy to break down. The little outrigger things I added later because the tightening of the bracket forced the bracket to rotate and pinch the tanks. The cap screw is welded to a piece of square tubing.
Now that the "holder" is done I could concentrate on the mounting. I did not take any pics of the million little jigs I built to make everythign square, it was not pretty. But the end result is all square. The bracket is welded to the left rail and a little piece of 1/8 joins the bracket to the right rail. There is still room to put my fingers behind the bracket to reach the steering box nuts.
I was originally thinking of bracing the top with tube running to the shock mounts but I was thinking that would be cumbersome. I had this 1/16 wall 1x1 I used as a gusset. Also some .75"x.125 wall tubing on teh bottom. This thing is not moving...
Making clearance for my intake elbow.
The end result gives me some room to mount a cinderblock in the future. Or a winch. Yes the grill still fits perfectly.
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In this pic you can see my next thing I have to figure out re-building body mounts. I am thinking of some small rubber mounts on top of the frame rail at the corners so they don't get in the way of the tires turning. Don't these trucks have issues with narrow SAS axles and big tires?
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Really happy with the way this turned out. now with so much weight taken off the body I don't have to spend a ton of engineering on rebuilding the body and it shouldn't rattle around as much.
The other plus about this setup is that If I ever decide later to narrow the front or put in some tube my rad is already taken care of.. Who knew you could learn anything from a Jeep?
To make intake clearance I cut my throttle body in half. The front housed the MAF sensor which will not be needed in my setup.
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I used a dremel to create a mounting lip and I'm in the process of dremel, jb weld, repeat. The problem is the outer lip is oval shaped and its creating a problem with the intake elbow. 3.3" wide, 3.1" tall. I was thinking of making a sleeve about 3.3" ID and 3.5" OD to slide over the TB and fill the void with epoxy. I think it would make this a lot easier.
The problem is trying to build up the area with JB it sags so much before it dries I can see it taking forever to build it up.
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Also, anyone have experience mounting a TB on a lathe? Could I just pile on some epoxy, and turn a perfect round lip on the edge?