Z.T.R. ZERO TURNING RADIUS for trailer !
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Z.T.R. ZERO TURNING RADIUS for trailer !
Whoa, what the hell do you mean…I never had it!Man your loosing it!!!
Yes, that's the step bumper. I have one too, and if you get the actual new kit, it comes with a new rear tailgate kit that is split in the middle, and opens like double doors / barn doors, instead of the single drop-down tailgate. I haven't installed the tailgate, but I have it.
A couple of questions if you don’t mind.We've been taking advantage of the coronapocalypse to get some work done, and we finally got the hitch extension kit installed.
Next project is the winch!
- I have the rear step bumper, and with the bumper on the trailer neck hits the bumper, so I'm hoping this gives it enough clearance. Is that what this extension is actually for, or is it for something else?
- Everything is covered in TM 9-2320-365-34-2, 18-2. M1078/M1079 PINTLE HOOK EXTENSION KIT INITIAL INSTALLATION
- Under INITIAL SETUP - Equipment Conditions, it says "Cargo bed removed, if equipped (para 15-.". Yeah, we did not remove the bed! Some parts are a bit of a hassle, but it's still totally doable. Taking the bed off would be a huge pain, so I don't understand why they would even suggest that. At the end, you have 16 bolts left over, that I assume were to reinstall the bed, but interestingly they are NOT huckbolts (thank god).
- It has a lot of bracing and stuff, a ridiculous amount actually (150lb worth). The pintle goes from being installed through a 1/2" steel plate on the truck, to inside a 1/2" plate box, plus a new frame cross-member and bracing. I wonder if the kit is a "one size fits all", including MTVs and trucks with heavier towing capacities? We installed it all anyway.
- The instructions have you remove 4 huckbolts. An easy way to do this is to use a cutoff wheel into the side of the huckbolt, just where the smooth collar meets the hex head. In this area of the fastener there are no threads, so once you cut through the bolt inside it just falls off (some needed a whack from a hammer).
View attachment 793668- You need to drill 4x 3/4" (or 19mm) holes in the back plate cross-member of the truck. We rented a mag drill, and used a 3/4" hole saw. The mag drill took a little careful positioning to be able to reach all the holes, but worked. The 3/4" hole saw wobbled some and actually cut holes about 13/16" (~0.050" oversized), mostly because the rental drill has been abused, but the holes worked fine. This metal drilled fine, and did not appear to be hardened... the bit is still nice and sharp.
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View attachment 793670- After that it was mostly bolt together. Putting the L-brackets that hold the wiring in place back on was a bit of a hassle, because it's hard to reach up in there. (Still not worth taking the bed off! Are they nuts?) Looks good complete, though I'll have to get the CARC out and paint it. I haven't been able to test it with the trailer yet.
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It's been 2.5 years now since we installed it. I'll try to answer your questions, but some of it I don't remember. That in itself is a good thing, because that means it went together fairly straightforwardly, and there are no memorable events (e.g. "spent 10 hours trying to pound a part into place" didn't happen).A couple of questions if you don’t mind.
1) How long did the entire job take?
2) Was / were there any tools, materials, or supplies you should have on hand that you hadn’t thought about?
3) The TM doesn’t say to remove the shock completely; it just says to “move (rotate top) away & out of the way”. Did you need to loosen the lower shock mount?
4) The rear crossmember support spacers - were they a ‘hammer fit’ or slid right in?
5) Do you recommend installing the rear cross member lower support prior installing the new rear cross member support between the frame rails? Install it as 1 unit basically?
6) What would you have done differently?
Thank you. I am not anticipating getting it done in one day. Like you, I own more tools than a man should ever need. I am not inclined to rent a mag base drill. I’ll more than likely incrementally drill bigger holes until I get to 3/4” - 19mm.It's been 2.5 years now since we installed it. I'll try to answer your questions, but some of it I don't remember. That in itself is a good thing, because that means it went together fairly straightforwardly, and there are no memorable events (e.g. "spent 10 hours trying to pound a part into place" didn't happen).
1.) 24.5 hours, across 7 days (I keep track in a spreadsheet)
2.) Aside from renting the magnetic drill press, I don't recall needing anything else. However, I do already own a LOT of tools, as in "one of every hand tool Craftsman sells".
3.) I don't think we took off or loosened the shock mount at all.
4.) I don't remember hammering anything in that was hard to get to fit... it all went together pretty easily. It did take a bit of work to fish the parts up in place without taking the whole bed off the truck, but it's totally doable.
5.) I don't remember.
6.) I don't remember, however, I wrote the original post for a reason, and if there had been important information like that I would have shared it then. So I assume there aren't any significant things that stood out to me then.
.Thank you. I am not anticipating getting it done in one day. Like you, I own more tools than a man should ever need. I am not inclined to rent a mag base drill. I’ll more than likely incrementally drill bigger holes until I get to 3/4” - 19mm.
if you don't have a multi purpose printer (aka- scanner included) maybe a friend or a member here can scan those to PDF so they can be uploaded to the TM section here. I have one if no one near by does. PM me if that is the case.Photos of the schematics and part #’s. No where in the TM did it mention relocating the axle vent T fitting.
There is a right & left spacer for the new rear main cross member support. They slid in without difficulty.
Smart idea! These kinds of things end up getting lost over time so saving them in a central location is the way to go.if you don't have a multi purpose printer (aka- scanner included) maybe a friend or a member here can scan those to PDF so they can be uploaded to the TM section here. I have one if no one near by does. PM me if that is the case.
I'd definitely like to see a copy, if you can scan them. If you can't upload them, PM me.Smart idea! These kinds of things end up getting lost over time so saving them in a central location is the way to go.
I have a scanner and can try & get them uploaded later. I’ve tried uploading docs before without success though. I will need help on where in the forum they should be uploaded to.
IGNORE THIS..... I forgot a step will correct in another post
Even if he scans them to PDF, you will not be able to enlarge without loss of clarity. That is only true if you output a PDF from the original source (e.g. CAD), and that program was able to do so in a vector format.Thank you for your time and efforts. Unfortunately these are images and not as useful. When you get the time please scan them to PDF so they can be enlarged w/out loss of image clarity.
hmmm...... yep..... been awhile..... totally forgot about the have to convert to vector first.Even if he scans them to PDF, you will not be able to enlarge without loss of clarity. That is only true if you output a PDF from the original source (e.g. CAD), and that program was able to do so in a vector format.
Long story short, all you would get is a PDF of these same images, with no benefits besides convenience of all being in one file. (I tried to combine them into a single PDF before uploading, but Acrobat was getting an error on the image files, and I didn't have more time to monkey with it, so I posted as-is.)
Yup... usually use "png" myselfResolution.
If you don't start with a higher resolution, you can't ever get a high resolution.
... ...
As a site admin I can remember explaing it to folks back in the day who would load up bmps right off a camera dump. They'd embed dozens of MASSIVE images into a thread and users would scream about how it took 10 minutes for a single page to load over dialup.drat.... this website reduced the file size..... images are too small to do a worthwhile conversion
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