Page 1 of 4 123 ... LastLast

Thread: ARB line routing (from inside the cab)

  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Gresham, Oregon
    Posts
    544

    Default ARB line routing (from inside the cab)

    You know it's funny how quickly space gets used up in what's suppose to be a full size vehicle.

    I tried to find a place to mount my ARB full size compressor in the engine compartment. I even got Slee's mount and after losing half a dozen bolts and the studs, I said screw it. It's a great design, but I don't know how anyone gets the thing mounted in such a tight spot.

    With no place to go except inside the cab, I found a place to mount it in the rear. No pics yet, but I'm also hooking up a small tank I had lying around to it and it should be a great air source for airing up tires.

    The only problem is how do I run an air line from inside the cab to the under the truck without (and this is the key) drilling a hole in my floorboard? Are there any hidden drain pucks somewhere on the floor or especially behind the panels in the rear of the 80? If I could find one say on the driver's side that would be great. I can tap a hole through the drain puck and seal it up and not do any major damage. Any ideas?

    I was also thinking about just using the big ARB compressor as an air source for my air tank, and getting the mini compressor that might fit inside engine compartment a little better as my locker air source, but that's getting redundent and spendy.
    Brian McCamish
    In Search of History Expeditions
    Gresham, Oregon
    1995 Toyota Land Cruiser FZJ80 (new expedition rig)
    1989 Toyota 4x4 truck w/SAS (retired expedition rig)
    www.brian894x4.com (Homepage)
    Our Land Cruiser FZJ80 Main Page
    In Search of History Page
    Abandoned & Active Railroads of the NW Page

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Posts
    3,050
    With how much noise that ARB compressor produces, I toughed it out and installed it using Slee's bracket. Once in that corner I have had no problems with it. I also used Slee's manifold for distribution. I have an Extreme aire compressor in the back of the 80 under the drawer deck but use it only to fill tires when I am out of the vehicle



    ( the manifold in the photo was moved slightly to the right of its temp location, and the air valves rotated down)
    Pasquale - KE7GVY

    DesertDude Films, LLC <> DesertDude Music.com <> 110 Project Group, Inc

    "Taking the path less credentialed"

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Anaheim, California USA
    Posts
    8,418
    I wouldn't use a ARB air compressor with a tank. It cant fill it fast enough to matter. I've tried it. The only time it works good is at the beginning when the tank is already full. After that, the compressor just runs forever. Not to mention it takes forever to fill your tires.

    I too, would probably mount it under the hood still. They are noisy even from under the hood like Desertdude said.
    Dave & Yoshi
    The Adventure Duo
    1993 Toyota Landcruiser FZJ80
    1997 Toyota Landcruiser FZJ80 Collectors Edition
    2010 SoCalTeardrops Krawler 459
    2005 Suzuki DRZ400s
    Tread Lightly! Trainer | Manufacturer of the Trasharoo | Outfitted by Sierra Expeditions

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Gresham, Oregon
    Posts
    544
    Ya, I don't expect the ARB compressor to be all that great. I ran the one in my truck to air up tires and it took forever, but I don't air up/down very often so I don't mind the wait and I don't want to spring for a more expensive compressor.

    What I'm using is a small 2 gallon air tank that I've found a nice little cubby hole in the back next to the AO drawers to stuff it in. There's enough air in that tank to at least partly air up one tire, should the compressor fail or to run the air locker a few times, if the compressor fails, which is mainly what I plan to use it for.

    I've run the compressor where I have it mounted and it's surprisingly quiet. I remember the one in my truck being much louder, but it might be the surface that it's mounted on. In my truck it was mounted on metal and the ARB mount doesn't have any shock absorber. In my 80, I have it mounted on the wood floor of my AO drawers, which I think absorbs a good deal of noise.

    In any case, I don't expect to be running for more than a few seconds at any one time, while I'm driving.

    Well see how this comes out. I may upgrade the compressor later on.
    Brian McCamish
    In Search of History Expeditions
    Gresham, Oregon
    1995 Toyota Land Cruiser FZJ80 (new expedition rig)
    1989 Toyota 4x4 truck w/SAS (retired expedition rig)
    www.brian894x4.com (Homepage)
    Our Land Cruiser FZJ80 Main Page
    In Search of History Page
    Abandoned & Active Railroads of the NW Page

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    The Highest State
    Posts
    3,758
    One thing I was wondering is the locations of the solenoids. Mine spit gear oil and if they were inside I'd get tired of the smell lingering in my cab. Is this less of a problem with the Air Lockers in the bigger Cruiser axles?

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Tucson, AZ
    Posts
    1,253
    I fabbed up a bracket and mounted mine in the stock jack location. I ran the air line (sleeved in 1/4" fuel line) and wires under the drivers side carpet in the wire chase. The wires went up into the dash from there and the air line went thru the upper firewall to the front diff. I have an Aussie in the rear so no air line there. The compressor holds air really well so it only runs when I first turn it on and then only after a couple of cycles of the locker, so noise is not a factor to me.
    Alvin
    62 VW Type 1 Ragtop - new project
    94 FZJ80 "Tortuga" +4", locked, geared, armored and scratched to hell
    2000 XTerra slightly modded "Rocksie"
    Copper State Cruisers

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Posts
    3,050
    Quote Originally Posted by DaveInDenver
    One thing I was wondering is the locations of the solenoids. Mine spit gear oil and if they were inside I'd get tired of the smell lingering in my cab. Is this less of a problem with the Air Lockers in the bigger Cruiser axles?

    Its been an issue for me;

    Christo sent me small fittings that screw on where the solenoids release the air. I was able to use the arb blue plastic line and run this into a small capped plastic jar. I can monitor how much gear oil is coming back up, and not have it spray inside the engine compartment.

    I had to go into the rear diff and replace the air assembly along with two seals ( the copper tube snapped off inside after 30K miles) this may have been the source of the gear oil...
    Pasquale - KE7GVY

    DesertDude Films, LLC <> DesertDude Music.com <> 110 Project Group, Inc

    "Taking the path less credentialed"

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Cerritos, CA
    Posts
    1,025
    Quote Originally Posted by Desertdude
    Christo sent me small fittings that screw on where the solenoids release the air. I was able to use the arb blue plastic line and run this into a small capped plastic jar. I can monitor how much gear oil is coming back up, and not have it spray inside the engine compartment
    That's a great idea. Before I regeared, my front locker solenoid would spew oil not only when disengaged but when the diff would warm up. After the regear I've been lucky and the solenoid has been dry.


    My arb compressor mount arrived wed and now I get to see what you're talking about Brian. I have the larger compressor as well. We just use the existing holes to mount the mount correct? We're not replacing any bolts with the threaded studs?
    Mark Lachica
    -1995 FZJ80
    Mods and Information
    -2007 DRZ400S



  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Sandy, UT
    Posts
    6,180
    Keep an eye out for the new ARB compressor, it has over double the volume of the older RDCKA (2.18 CFM versus 1.00 CFM @ 29psi).. .
    Kurt Williams
    Cruiser Outfitters
    Your original outfitter for OME - ARB - AA - Safari - Helton - Engel - Since 1992
    Join us on Facebook
    ExpeditionUtah - A lifelong project of exploring Utah
    kurt@cruiseroutfitters.com

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Sandy, UT
    Posts
    6,180
    Quote Originally Posted by DaveInDenver
    One thing I was wondering is the locations of the solenoids. Mine spit gear oil and if they were inside I'd get tired of the smell lingering in my cab. Is this less of a problem with the Air Lockers in the bigger Cruiser axles?
    Technically, none of them should expel more than say a teaspoon of oil over an extended period, if you have more than that in any locker you should start looking for internal locker problems. If the locker seems to function fine, and your ok with the oil "spewage", I would get one of the solenoid fittings so you can at least direct the gearlube somewhere

    Here is some related information:
    http://www.cruiseroutfitters.com/tec...ubleshoot.html
    Kurt Williams
    Cruiser Outfitters
    Your original outfitter for OME - ARB - AA - Safari - Helton - Engel - Since 1992
    Join us on Facebook
    ExpeditionUtah - A lifelong project of exploring Utah
    kurt@cruiseroutfitters.com

Page 1 of 4 123 ... LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •