Archive for the ‘Mods’ Category

Jeep Cherokee Broken Bumpstop Bolt Repair

Friday, August 27th, 2010

The other day, I tried to change my rear bumpstops and snapped 2 of the bolts. For the short term I punched the studs and the fastener into the subframe and threaded in some half inch bolts. I wasn’t too happy with that solution because I felt they wouldn’t be strong enough. While reading JeepForum, I came across a thread on fixing TJ transfer skid plates. I figured if it would work for a skid plate, it would work for a bumpstop. I wasn’t about to spend $8 a pop on them from a dealership, and I knew I didn’t need that much toughness. I found some nutserts at Fastenal. that would fit the holes in my subframe and should hold. I got 4 of them with tax and shipping for less than $9.

Homebrew Installation Tool
Here’s a nutsert on on a homebrew installation tool. It’s an M10 bolt with 2 flat washers, a 7/16 nut (anything large enough to spin freely on the bolt will work), and a star lock washer.

Necessary Hand Tools
The only hand tools needed are a socket to turn the bolt, and a wrench to hold the nut from spinning.

Test Installation
Test Installation on one of the doors of my parts XJ. I wanted to see exactly how it installed before I got up under the Jeep where space was limited.

Cross section of test installation
Cross section of the installation. The door panel wasn’t vertical and was dented, so the bolt’s not straight.

Nutserts installed in the subframe
Both nutserts installed in the frame.

Bumpstop Installed
Bumpstop installed.

Here are some more random pics of took while I was working on this project. If the fix seems to hold up, I may invest in a hand full of these when I replace my rear shocks next time.

Carnage & Repair

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

This is a quick post about the past few weeks. I had been dragging my feet for the last year to install my tinted quarter glass. I was down in WV for the JeepInWV Jeep Show and locked my keys in the Jeep. After about 30 minutes of messing with it, I ended up shattering a quarter glass to get into the Jeep.

Carnage
This needless to say made for a loud 3 hour ride home.

Not having much of a choice I had to install the new quarter glass. It only took about 10 minutes to replace this one and about an hour to replace the other one (because I couldn’t get it to shatter).

Tinted Quarter Glass
If I would have know it was that easy, I would have done it long ago. I really enjoy the upgrade to tinted glass. Now I just need to get the hatch glass replaced and I’ll be golden.

Finished the Interior

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

I got off my butt today and got the rest of the interior swapped. It’s not something I want to do again. Removing the old carpet was the worst, and took about an hour. Infact the whole disassemble took twice as long as putting it back together. Here are the pictures of what I got done today. I still need to mount the piece for the rear cargo pocket.

Overhead Bracket
I got the mounting plate to check for fit. I still need to pull it and drill holes for mounting a radio up there. I’m pushing for this small uniden CB I have, my girlfriend thinks I should put a 2 meter ham radio up there.

Old Center Console
I had a hell of a time getting the old console out. I ended up just saying f*ck it and broke out the saw.

Broken Seat Bolt from Inside
I discovered why my front seat seems to flex when I lean. The bolt is broken off flat with the floor.
Broken Seat Bolt from Outside
This is the underside of the bolt. I figure a can of PB Blast, a pair of vice grips, & a trip to the junk yard should fix that.

Carpet Installed
Here’s the new carpet installed. I found out the flat bracket that holds duct work that goes through the console is cracked, so I need to snag one of those at the yard too.

Everything Installed
Everything Installed
Everything Installed

Mag Light Mount
Mag Light Mount
I had played with different ideas to mount my Mag Light, and finally settled on this. I’m very very happy with it.

Here is the full gallery of the interior swap. Today’s work starts on the bottom half of page 2.

New Interior

Monday, April 27th, 2009

On Saturday morning, I picked up this mess:
New Jeep Interior
I got most of the interior out of a wrecked 2000 Jeep Cherokee, that was in quite a bit better shape. I got the carpet (both front and rear sections), the rear bench seat, the front buckets, center console, and sun visors. There are afew more parts I want to go back and get, and the guy said he wasn’t probably getting rid of it for afew weeks.

Here’s why I’m swapping:
Drives Seat

Passangers Seat

Back Seat

Cargo Area

I got motivated yesterday afternoon and got part of the swap done. I’ve got the rear carpet in and the rear seat. I still need to yank the front seats, console, and carpet (the easy part).

New Sun Visors
I still need to wire the lights (my old visors didn’t have lights).

Rear Carpet Installed
Here’s the carpet installed, and trim waiting to be installed.

Just needs the rear seat
Waiting for the rear seat.

Everything back together
Everything back together.

Much better
Much better than the original rear seat (see above).

Jeep Goodness

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

This is going to be a quick update. I’ve started doing the maintenance and upgrades to the Jeep. I replaced the saggy rear lift gate struts with a new set. They came from ebay and I suspect they were designed for something a bit heavier, as the liftgate raises on it’s own when opened and you have to push kind of hard to get it closed. No big deal, as the struts wear they won’t go all floppy as quickly.

The next upgrade was to replace the crappy original gauge cluster with a real one. Below are before and after:
Original Gauge Cluster
The original gauge cluster.
Replacement Gauge Cluster
The new gauge cluster. This mod alone makes the Jeep feel 100 % better.

Somebody backed into the Jeep and cracked the tail light. Below is the original tail light and the replacement.
Tail Lights

Lastly, I took some poser pics of the Jeep last week. Here’s my favorite:
Poser Pic
You can also see the full album from that shoot here.

In other non Jeep news, I downloaded the trial for the Warhammer MMO. It feels alot like WoW, but the graphics are less cartoony. I just wish they’d give you more than 10 days on the trial (maybe 14) and allow you to progress beyond level 10. Oh…well… I’ll play until the trial is over and be done with it. I doubt I’m going to see enough in the glimpse that they give to sell me on the game.

iPod Resurrection

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Way back on July, 11, 2007, I posted about an iPod I had gotten. At the time, the girl I got it from said she was pretty sure the hard drive was bad. Ever since then, I’ve had intermittent issues with the iPod.

Afew weeks back I thought it was dead, after not having used it in afew months I got the ever popular sad face.

iPod Sad Face

iPod Sad Face

I was able to revive the iPod, but this was the 3rd time in the last year and a half that I had to factory reset the it. At that point I decided to replace the hard drive. A quick search of ebay found a replacement Toshiba hard drive that was a newer model of the one in my iPod. Being as cash was an issue, I decided to replace the existing 20 gig hard drive with another 20 gig. This would have been a good time to upgrade the hard drive size, if I had some extra cash.

I followed the instructions in this blog, but probably could have figured it out on my own. iPods are pretty simple once you get the case open.

After replacing the hard drive and going through the format/restore process of the hard drive. I was very satisfied with the outcome. No part of the process was really difficult or time consuming. Total time invested was less than an hour + the time to resync my music once the iPod was setup. I’ve noticed the seek time has decreased when listening to music. Seek time is the amount of time from when song information appears on the screen until the track starts to play. With my old hard drive the seek time was as high as 5 seconds. With the new hard drive, I’m seeing seek times of no more than a second in a half.

One additional step I did before I reassembled the iPod was take an emery board and sand down the corner I had roughed up while prying the iPod apart. This was so that I didn’t have any rough or sharp edges or nicks in the plastic.

If the iPod continues to work properly, I may consider upgrading the existing battery to a battery that’s designed for an iPod photo/video. That should lengthen the time I can listen on a single charge.