You are correct. Found out when it arrived at home...This is the wrong transfer skid. Need the one that ends in 41, not 44. 41 is shorter and fits the Taco only.
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You are correct. Found out when it arrived at home...This is the wrong transfer skid. Need the one that ends in 41, not 44. 41 is shorter and fits the Taco only.
Mine had had a hardware bag in it.Should I have received a hardware bag?
I may make mine available. I'm holding off until I can make the design to, hopefully, work with the GX.Kind of an aside for this thread, but since we got on the Tacoma side of things, does anyone know if the burlier ~1/4" aluminum '24 Tacoma TRD Pro (front) skid will work on the LC?
I was able to take the u-bolts from the oem old plastic skid. The small access panel had 3x u-nuts. Consequently, I needed to use m8 bolts from these locations to mount the trim piece to the new steel skid plate, instead of the spec’d m6 + u-nuts. Its over built now but works.Yes a hardware bag with black bolts that are smaller than those that came out of the stock vehicle (I did not use any of them), and the two u-nuts for the trim piece. Bummer, but all you really need is the slide-on u-nuts.
I do. I have $6000 worth of damage from off-roading with the mid level (LC) "skid plates." They don't protect anything. The impact driving on the dunes destroyed my radiator and AC compressor and I haven't had my car for 1 month. Spend the cash to order the Toyota steel ones from the FI trim. I didn't know the difference but. now I do..I understand that the First Edition has a different skid plate than other trims. Anyone have any idea what the difference might be?
I don’t think the upgraded skid plate would have prevented your damage. Looking at the radiator placement this rig will need a custom radiator plate that is somehow tied into the frame (possibly at the tow hooks). The accountants definitely won the debate with the engineers on the radiator placement.I do. I have $6000 worth of damage from off-roading with the mid level (LC) "skid plates." They don't protect anything. The impact driving on the dunes destroyed my radiator and AC compressor and I haven't had my car for 1 month. Spend the cash to order the Toyota steel ones from the FI trim. I didn't know the difference but. now I do..
This is my first off-road rig so I’m a total newb. I’m sure you’re right but I feel like the better skid would have helped? In any case I’m getting that and will go to 17” wheels with a bigger tire to hopefully helpI don’t think the upgraded skid plate would have prevented your damage. Looking at the radiator placement this rig will need a custom radiator plate that is somehow tied into the frame (possibly at the tow hooks). The accountants definitely won the debate with the engineers on the radiator placement.
Thanks - I was able to re-purpose the u-nuts and bold holding down the small access panel.Just installed my skid plates. If you reuse the existing bolts you probably don't need the bolts it comes with, really the only critical pieces would be the threaded clips to attach the plastic trim.
Can you share a YouTube video of the new horn and part #? The OEM horn sounds like a circus clown...Installed the full skid plate (front and transmission) today along with the premium horn (ordered off eBay). The premium horn uses the same connectors so it’s literally just changing the horn heads - easiest mod ever. The skid plates went on with no hiccups thanks to all the info and pictures posted here. Thanks everyone who posted in this thread.View attachment 12429View attachment 12430
Check out this thread: 'Horn Swap to Premium horn'Can you share a YouTube video of the new horn and part #?
Took one decent hit on my first trip offroad, there is a pic of the skid plate afterwards in the trip report thread. The front skid ended up flexing upward and contacting some metal on the frame above it, but no real damage, I'm happy with how it performed.Apologize if f this has been answered, I have looked through most of these threads. Is there anyone reporting real world experience with these skid plates functioning with some pretty good hits? Obviously nothing is going to defend against stupidity, but any real world reports of it successfully acting as more than a brush guard? Also any thoughts on aftermarket guards that my protect the radiator a bit better?