Fortunately Mark and I label all this stuff when it comes apart. Years later I’d have no clue what it came out of. This 205 is from an ‘89 Chevrolet K30 crewcab truck from Fairbanks, AK. It was a former Alyeska Pipeline truck with a 6.2 liter diesel. This case has the more desirable large input bearing
Oil looked good…
It’s apart. Internals look great but for some odd reason the inside of the 205 case is rusty. Easy fix, I’ll take that over junk internals
Found the factory tag, looks like it might actually be an ‘85 case that had been swapped into the ‘89 truck at some point. Either way, it still has the large 90mm input bearing
Blasted and nearly ready for paint and reassembly. Flat surfaces got smoothed with a DA
No more rust on the inside now
So here’s some input shaft comparison. The middle shaft is a new “Fat Shaft” from Off-Road Design. Left shaft is from this case and the right shaft is from a different 205 altogether. The left shaft is internally splined. Note that the ORD shaft is far bigger and more robust
Another ORD shaft on top, OEM 205 on the bottom. The goal is brute strength, all the internal shafts are being replaced/upgraded
I’ve been putting off the sheet metal and rocker replacement because I dislike body work so much. Time to just get it over with
It’s pretty hard to find panels for this vintage FSJ. We had ordered rockers from BJ’s off-road but the fitment was TERRIBLE. None of the contours matched the original lines and they are made in Taiwan. After going back and forth with them, they admitted they were aware of some fitment problems and were “working on it”. Over 6 months later with no progress, my buddy just bent some up locally. I still needed to use the cab corner and pillar from BJ’s tho, fortunately, those pieces were ballpark close. No where near great, but close enough after cutting some of the bends and contours out
Thanks for the encouragement everyone!! Got a bit closer today and managed to finesse the driver cab corner into place!
Reinforced the interior of the “B” pillar
Made supports for the upper part of the cab corner
One example of many regarding how poorly these panels fit. The original 90 degree break in the sheet metal left the panel WAY too long to correctly line up with the flange inside the cab. So, you cut the panel down and weld a length of steel in lengthwise so things actually line up
Correctly getting it to line up as best as possible required my wife pushing the hell out of it in several places as I tacked it into place. The Taiwanese steel is also a joy to weld on, just full of impurities