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Posted

Have been hearing some creaking in the front for a bit now, thinking it was suspension parts. Then yesterday on the way home (after forklift flex to check some remaining clearance issues) the steering felt loose, and there was wobble. Side to side wobble, but not severe enough to be called DW. I would probably think it was DW if I had not experienced actual DW before.

 

Obvious culprit would be the track bar. But all seems to be tight. I then do a thorough examination of the entire steering and front suspension systems, as well as the frame.

 

THE #@%&$#* FRAME RIPPED RIGHT OVER TOP OF A STEERING BOX BOLT!

 

:headpop: :fs1: :ack: :grrrr: :fs2:

 

My tow hook bracket and sway bar bracket both straddle the rip, helping hold it together and (hopefully) preventing it from ripping further. Truck will be parked until this is fixed.

 

Current plan is to cut two pieces of 1/4 steel, and sandwich the frame between them from the very front, back up to the tract bar bracket.

 

Problem is, Saturday I have a cook out to go to, Sunday is my oldest daughter's graduation, I need to get the Strasburg Corn Fest web pages updated and I'm supposed to take my POS off road next weekend.

Posted

that sux. I'm pretty sure ive seen braces that go from the steering gear to the otherside of hte frame to keep this from happening.

Posted

Make sure you stop-drill the crack and probably seam-weld it before doing the plating.

 

In case you weren't planning to already. :thumbsup:

Posted

It's fairly common for cracking to develop from those 3 bolt holes, on either side, or for the bolts to actually pull through the frame.

 

I'd weld plates over each side... 1/8" would be minimum. 3/16" would be a nice thickness. Stop drill the crack (I'd drill about 1/8"), weld it up, grind it smooth. Put a bunch of 3/8" holes in the plates to rosette it all over the place. End the plates in fishtails and weld the snot out of 'em. Should be good.

 

I guess the C-ROK (sp?) steering box brace would be a good starting place if you want to take the easy way out.

Posted
It's fairly common for cracking to develop from those 3 bolt holes, on either side, or for the bolts to actually pull through the frame.

 

I'd weld plates over each side... 1/8" would be minimum. 3/16" would be a nice thickness. Stop drill the crack (I'd drill about 1/8"), weld it up, grind it smooth. Put a bunch of 3/8" holes in the plates to rosette it all over the place. End the plates in fishtails and weld the snot out of 'em. Should be good.

 

I guess the C-ROK (sp?) steering box brace would be a good starting place if you want to take the easy way out.

 

X2!!!

 

THEN, fix the freakin' gate now that the cows are out... BUY/MAKE A STEERING BRACE!!! :shake: :wavey: :shake: :eek: :D

 

CW

Posted

Here is what you do to fix it.

 

1. Drive out of the rust belt.

2. Buy a rust free Comanche.

3. Drive home.

4. Swap anything of value from "Rusty" onto your new Jeep

5. Sell whats left of the 2

 

There you go. Rust is a cancer, no matter how many band-aids you put on it, its still there.

Posted

That is the plan for when this one completely falls apart underneath me. For now this truck is still useful to me, showing me all the weak spots one at a time.

Posted

Same here. My 88 is rusty as all get out, but it's no big deal to patch each hole/weakness with non-rust-able materials (or armor) as I find them. And I'll never ever bring a clean MJ to Michigan again (although, admittedly I wasn't the one that brought my 86 here, I just didn't take enough precautions to keep it clean). That's just a death sentence for the poor truck. :(

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