Extreme Terrain
4x4Wire Trail Talk Forums: Jeep, Toyota, Mitsubishi, Pajero, Isuzu, Kia, 4WD, 4x4, SUV, Off-Road and OutdoorWire Forums


Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Rate Thread
Page 3 of 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Re: Picking up the ball on ISUZU Heavy Duty Tie Rods - ifs - Sneak Peak! [Re: mlclark] #675079 12/10/05 12:49 PM
Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 1,203
TrooperJ Offline
Body Damage is Cool
Id love to have a set. Good point on the pricing. These will probably come later next year for me.

How would these do with wear on the shocks? My tie rods wear into the shocks just enough to slightly ding them. Would we need to run upside down shocks (like the edelbrocks?)

Oh, and happy birthday, Sean. <img src="/forums/images/graemlins/cheers.gif" alt="" />
-J<img src="/forums/images/graemlins/kewl.gif" alt="" />


Jordan Brown in Athens Georgia

The 2007 budget for the US Military covers Jack Bauer, two pistols and four billion rounds of ammunition.
Re: Picking up the ball on ISUZU Heavy Duty Tie Rods - ifs - Sneak Peak! [Re: ducktrooper] #675080 12/10/05 03:52 PM
Joined: Jan 2000
Posts: 1,656
M
matthew Offline OP
Body Damage is Cool
Quote
I'm interested in a set...will wait to see price.


i understand pricing is always an issue. the problem with a product like this is that you can hold them in your hand...so small seems like it shoud = cheap.

these are really no different in concept than the Heavy Duty tie rods for a Jeep, Dana 44, etc... that is in number of parts...only real difference is that instead of one being 4' and the other being 3'...........they are both about 1'.

just to give you an idea, the similar type item from other manufactures for other applications run in the $300 range. As an example, All Pro Offroad has a HD draglink kit for Toyotas w/ FJ ends - $60 for the adjuster, $30 each for the TRE's and $5.00 each (x2) for the Jams = $130.00 (shorten that down by a foot and a half and that is the same as this product.)


Now that being said, and knowing that you guys are......well nicely put...."budget minded"...........i have been working hard to get these done in a production fashion that will reduce the costs.

the only way to do that was for me to go out on a limb and Manufacture a few hundred to get the Price of the center Hex sleeves down. So in this case Sean is right one of the real expense ends up being the 4 TRE's (Tie Rod Ends)


i'm shooting for an initial price point under $100 per side for the complete tie rod w/ 2 TRE's, 2 jam nuts, 1 sleeve

that shouldn't bee too tuff to swallow considering how many salvage tie rods i sell at $25.00 per side and that guys are buying a "clamp on" type protector for $65 per side.

i'll have the final pricing hammered down by the time all sleeves are here.

Last edited by matthew; 12/10/05 03:53 PM.

'93 RS 3.2L - DD/trail build
'97 7.3L Powerstroke - tow rig
'71 FJ40 - V-8, nv4500, atlas, D60, 14B - current build

Owner: http://www.INDEPENDENT4x.com

m-f 9am-6pm EST. 804-550-0480
Re: Picking up the ball on ISUZU Heavy Duty Tie Rods - ifs - Sneak Peak! [Re: matthew] #675081 12/10/05 04:43 PM
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 83
T
TeamPSI Offline
Getting the Wheeling Fever
Considering that I was quoted $115 each + shipping from St. Charles Isuzu, and $135 each + shipping from a local stealership... The price is looking good to me.


1996 Rodeo 3.2l 4wd
3" Indy4x lift - 3" Body Lift - Calmini torsion bars - Superwinch hubs - Independent4x brake lines - 32x10.5x15 Pro Comp MT's - Flowmaster 2.5" cat-back - Indy4x Tie Rods - Rear Lockright
Re: Picking up the ball on ISUZU Heavy Duty Tie Rods - ifs - Sneak Peak! #675082 12/10/05 05:54 PM
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 5,911
Smiley Offline
Trail Leader
For those of you who have never broken a Tie Rodà you might be sitting there scratching your heads about all of thisà

HereÆs what MattÆs new beefy Tie Rods probably wonÆt do:


[Linked Image]

(* Ignoring the torn CV boot) --- The arrow indicates the problemà

Our stock Tie Rods are pretty weak, and often break under the stresses of spirited 4-wheeling û Usually when the throttle is being used to carry you over an obstacle, and a front tire leaves the ground for a moment; returning to earth while still spinning.


MattÆs new Tie Rods are substantially thicker and stronger than the OEM units, and should greatly reduce (if not downright eliminate!) the possibility of any future Tie Rod breakage.


If your Isuzu has Tie Rods (the 2nd gen Rodeos donÆt), and you go off-road û if you havenÆt broken one yet; itÆs basically only a matter of time before you doà Unless of course you get some of Matt's new ones û in which case youÆll most-likely NEVER break them.


Way to go, Matt! <img src="/forums/images/graemlins/kewl.gif" alt="" />


<img src="/forums/images/graemlins/cheers.gif" alt="" />
<img src="/forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />


Six Isuzus, so far... still have three of them.
Re: Picking up the ball on ISUZU Heavy Duty Tie Rods - ifs - Sneak Peak! [Re: Smiley] #675083 12/10/05 06:28 PM
Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 1,873
H
holger Offline
Body Damage is Cool
Quote

If your Isuzu has Tie Rods (the 2nd gen Rodeos donÆt), and you go off-road ...


this is a kind of common misconception... On my 2 gen Rodeo, I have the steering links which look exactly like the tie-rods, and they serve exactly the same purpose as the tie-rod do. If this does not make them tie-rods ... well, I am puzzled.

I still do not understand what's wrong with 2 gen Rodeos - why nobody makes re-inforced steering links for us.


Oleg
Axiom 4WD 2004: OME shocks, 32" BFG Mudders, RockSliderz, OME929+2" spacers, Stinkyfab bent RE rear links, front ARB locker, rear No-Slip locker, DOR front axle lowering kit, custom middle section skid plate, IronMan torsion bars.
Deceased Rodeo'02 4WD.
Re: Picking up the ball on ISUZU Heavy Duty Tie Rods - ifs - Sneak Peak! [Re: holger] #675084 12/10/05 06:54 PM
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 7,268
mlclark Offline
Isuzu Moderator
*****
Holger-

Because, the tie rods on the 2nd gen are part of the steering rack. One end has a TRE, like above, and the adjuster threads into the rack. The weak part is the threaded center adjuster and since you are limited by the fact it is tied into the rack, you are limited in what you can do to fix the problem.

At the least, you would need to either look at swapping to a beefier rack, (in general R&P racks are not what you would call beefy in the first place) or figure out what to do about fabbing up parts that would allow for a larger diameter adjuster. But, you would never be able to go to the internally threaded style Matt has above. It just would never really fit into the rack AND anything that increases diameter of the adjuster is going to interfere with the edge of the rack and you will loose angularity.

The shorter version: It just ain't possible. Even with money, this would be very highly improbable.

Michael

Re: Picking up the ball on ISUZU Heavy Duty Tie Rods - ifs - Sneak Peak! [Re: mlclark] #675085 12/10/05 07:06 PM
Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 1,873
H
holger Offline
Body Damage is Cool
Thank you Michael. Now I understand the problem.

So, if I break a "rod" on a trail, then, to fix it, I'll need to dis-assemble / re-assemble the whole R&P <img src="/forums/images/graemlins/scared.gif" alt="" /> On the trail <img src="/forums/images/graemlins/scared.gif" alt="" />


Oleg
Axiom 4WD 2004: OME shocks, 32" BFG Mudders, RockSliderz, OME929+2" spacers, Stinkyfab bent RE rear links, front ARB locker, rear No-Slip locker, DOR front axle lowering kit, custom middle section skid plate, IronMan torsion bars.
Deceased Rodeo'02 4WD.
Hijack Alert: Rack & Pinion trail repair [Re: holger] #675086 12/10/05 09:35 PM
Joined: Jun 2000
Posts: 3,702
BigSwede Offline
Roll Me Over
Not really...I know Mike Walter and others have figured out how to swap the end links (not sure what they are called on a rack&pinion setup) on the trail without replacing the whole rack. Of course, you have to be carrying the spare parts with you...

I recall this was discussed a few months ago in Tech forum...


Steve Carlson - 95 Trooper LS expo rig
Serenity now!
Re: Hijack Alert: Rack & Pinion trail repair [Re: BigSwede] #675087 12/10/05 10:05 PM
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 7,268
mlclark Offline
Isuzu Moderator
*****
The adjuster screws into the end of the rack that actually moves. It also pivots to allow for suspension movement. There used to be pictures around here, but I can't seem to find them.

Michael

Re: Picking up the ball on ISUZU Heavy Duty Tie Rods - ifs - Sneak Peak! [Re: TrooperJ] #675088 12/11/05 10:09 PM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 846
pucci Offline
Rock Warrior
count me in for a set, I was going to have some custom made but hadn't gotten around to it.

Quote
Would we need to run upside down shocks (like the edelbrocks?)

most likely. but do the edelbrocks for the 2G+ trucks fit on 1Gs?


2.6 Trooper
2.0 Impulse Turbo
Page 3 of 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9







4x4Wire Social:

| 4x4Wire on FaceBook |


OutdoorWire, 4x4Wire, JeepWire, TrailTalk, MUIRNet-News, and 4x4Voice are all trademarks and publications of OutdoorWire, Inc. and MUIRNet Consulting.
Copyright (c) 1999-2019 OutdoorWire, Inc and MUIRNet Consulting - All Rights Reserved, no part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without express written permission
You may link freely to this site, but no further use is allowed without the express written permission of the owner of this material.
All corporate trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.3
(Release build 20190728)
PHP: 7.4.33 Page Time: 0.007s Queries: 16 (0.005s) Memory: 0.6521 MB (Peak: 0.7758 MB) Data Comp: Off Server Time: 2026-06-04 09:14:47 UTC
Valid HTML 5 and Valid CSS