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Build/overland/4x4 stuff: 1989 Raider, 2010 Sequoia, and other projects

irish44j

Rank II

Enthusiast III

So part 2 of the new mini-hitch is that it's for a bike rack right now. I just got a killer hookup on a Thule X2 Pro hitch-mounted rack from a friend, which I plan to mostly use on the Sequoia, but decided to test it out on the swing-out hitch. Fits pretty well, though can't totally fold up due to the spare tire clearance. But the concept works, so I'm happy about that:







...but that's not the end plan. The X2 Pro mounting rails are individually-attached, and it's a pretty heavy rack that sticks out a good ways (especially on a short rig like this). So for the Raider, the plan is to build my own "stinger" from the hitch (without the heavy fold-up mechanism and other stuff) and just have one rail bolted to it, since I'm generally solo when in the Raider. That'll save a good amount of weight and give me better clearance. So that's the next project, but it's for another day.

Today's little project: exhaust stuff. The exhaust pipe on this has always been too short and dumps right under the bumper. Not a HUGE deal, but when sitting still, the exhaust tends to go up and get through the rear door seal on occasion, which is pretty annnoying. Plus the underside of the bumper and rear door get a lot of oil soot (this is a Mitsubishi after all....). So I picked up an elbow extension, cut the old pipe off right behind the hanger, welded the elbow on , and angle-cut the tip, and now it dumps off to the side NOT under the bumper. Hooray for small victories.



 

irish44j

Rank II

Enthusiast III

With the hitch-mount rack there, it basically blocks my third brake light which is low-mounted on the bottom of the back door. And it somewhat blocks the regular taillights too. So I ordered some low-profile LED lights and mounted one of them up on the top of the door, which has better rear-view over the bike. So for 9 bucks, this'll do. Only fun part was running the wiring through the frame of the door, but got it done eventually.

Looks a bit funny right underneath my rear camp light, but whatever. This whole truck looks a little funny...



Hard to see in daylight, but it's bright AF at night - like 5x brighter than the stock brake lights.



On a side note, I was driving along with an Ineos Grenadier on the way home from work. Not the first one I've seen in this area (like a dozen), but the more I see them the more I like them. And they do look a good bit like a "modern" Raider/Pajero - almost moreso than a Land Rover, I think...

 

irish44j

Rank II

Enthusiast III

Time for some cleaning and fixing stuff. I built the roof rack about 5 years ago now and it hasn't been off the truck in that time. I've added things, drilled holes, drilled more holes, welded on it up there, touched up rusty spots, and done some half-assed brackets to mount things. Plus the beige roof underneath is pretty grungy and has some welding spatter and overspray. Time to fix all that.

So off with the rack (after unbolting all the heavy crap on it).



Even after washing it, the roof looks terrible.



So first order of business is a quick sand and repaint. Threw up the awning so the annoying tree over my driveway doesn't drop sap or stuff on it, and got to painting. I used Rustoleum "Sand" color (brush-on) originally, with a bit of black mixed in to dull down the color a bit, so did that again and it matched about right and looks a lot better now.



I also put a strip of black vinyl on the front edge of the roof - so the rack fairing doesn't wear down the paint and also because the strip of "sand" between the windshield and the rack has always annoyed me for some reason lol.



Now on to the rack. Man, I probably had about a dozen holes in the bars where I drilled into mount various things that I later moved or un-mounted, and just taped over them with gorilla tape. So first order of business was to get the welder out and fill all those holes in. I also cut off the L-brackets I put on for the shower curtain enclosure. I mounted those on pretty janky and didn't like where it held the assembly, so wanted to make something a bit bettter and more "snug" to the rack. I also cut off the old front "horns" left over from the early rack version. I only kept them for all this time because my branch risers attach there, but gonna alter that as well.



So yeah, I cut off the "horns" and capped the tubes, then added the riser eyes onto the steel fairing instead. I don't use the risers much, but good to have if I'm somewhere they'd be useful. Raider windshields aren't exactly easy to find so don't want it smashed by a rando branch.



The roof boxes I've had attached with U-bolts around the bars, but decided it was time to make things easier to take on/off if needed, so welded in some weld nuts instead.



Did a few other things that aren't very interesting, including adding new brackets for the shower curtain and a few support and tiedown pieces, nothing too notable though. And got my neighbor to help lift the rack back on .



Oh, did I mention I weighed it all when it was off the truck. The rack itself weighs 60lbs (including the four flood lights and fairings). The two awnings + shower curtain weigh 46lbs. The Pelican cases weigh 18lbs each, and forgot to weigh the other box but it's a bit lighter, so say 15 lbs. So around 160lbs on the roof there, plus two traction boards in the front box (maybe 10lbs), and I usually carry lightweight stuff in the Pelican cases (chair, tarps, tent, etc.). So figure I'm usually around 200lbs on the roof when fully geared up, which I guess isn't too bad all things considered. Not that I have much choice - in a truck this small I need the roof storage rather than jamming it all inside....



I also raised the front box up. You may recall it was indented down below the fairing, but that made it VERY hard to get to the latches and the lid only opened about 30 degrees. So this solves both those problems.



Oh, I did cut all the handles off all three roof boxes, since I don't need to carry them around. So figure I saved a few pounds there haha....

So, that was a productive day from my POV, though from your POV it all probably looks about the same as before haha....
 

irish44j

Rank II

Enthusiast III

Well, let's keep going with some more projects. First one is an easy one, because I've done it already on this truck: Limb risers. You'll recall the old ones went from the rack "horns" to the front of the fenders (though I only used them a few times). With the horns gone and new mount locations, those are the wrong length - plus I wanted to make ones that used slightly lighter cable and were fully detachable. The old ones only detached on one end and I had to string them outside the rack. So the new set will be totally removable and I can stash them inside the rig instead. I also switched the spring to the topside and left the turnbuckle at the base for easier adjusting/tightening. And used a screw-type caribiner to attach on the fender.







They coil up pretty small and fit in my gear pouch (with winch remote and other stuff).

After that, finally got around to installing a new GMRS antennal. My original one snapped off halfway up at some point (it's a 2-piece design apparently) and my reception was pretty lousy for the last few trips. So I got my hands on a slightly taller (1-piece) Midland antenna and replaced it up there - so hopefully that will improve reception.



Oh, while I'm thinking of it - checked RockAuto last week and as is often the case with old vehicles of which few still exist, they had some maintenance items for almost nothing (manufacturer's closeout). So I picked up 6 of the cone-style air filters for 3 bucks each, and 4 or 5 oil filters for 1.50 each. These aren't as nice filters as the Mann one I have in there now (which has more elements), but for 3 bucks each I figure I'll just replace it after every trip or two and still do fine. The boxes for the filters were all mis-matched, falling apart...like they've been in the back shelves of Joe's Auto Parts for 30 years and he finally unloaded them lol...



Now, the next project. I'll admit this one was a bit impulsive since I got a bonus at work last month (pretty rare for federal employees these days....) and put most of it in savings, but wanted to buy myself something nice (and yes, SWMBO got something too, don't worry...). You'll recall that for a couple years I've had a Badlands Apex 5500 winch on the front of this thing. My viewpoint was that I don't winch often, and on a small truck with not that much horsepower unnecessary weight is to be avoided. I used it a couple times and found it "sufficient" but not exactly confidence-inspiring. A buddy just got a new trailer and asked me about installing a winch, so I sold him the 5500 and got busy finding a replacement with a bit more capability. After a lot of researching and a lot of deciding how much I wanted to spend, found one that should suit my purposes (9500lb), with synthetic line, and at a place that had it a good bit cheaper than other places (with free shipping). And surprisingly (from the cheapest seller) it showed up 2 days early (Saturday morning).



This is the Superwinch Tigershark 9500. Superwinch has a pretty good reputation historically (though they've been bought and sold a few times over the years) and the reviews seemed generally very good. No, it's not a Warn Zeon 10, but that wastn' in my budget. It should be a good step-up from the Badlands ones (plus they only make a 9.5k in they lower ZXR line, not the Apex, IIRC). There were a few other choices out there but this one was the right size, price, and I like the control box on the side rather than over the reel, personally.

So, let's get to work. First things first. The old Badlands one was mounted on a UTV plate that I basically welded directly onto my "custom" crossmember under the bumper (if you're following this thread, it's an old Chevy Suburban junkyard trailer hitch, which is BEEFY). So out came the grinders and spent an hour getting that thing off and cleaning up the crossmember.



As you can see, there's a raised plate that's part of the original hitch assembly, which is great reinforcement (and ties it all together). However, it's higher than the rest so thought about various options as to how to make a larger plate fit "over it."

I ran down to harbor freight and bought their large winch mount plate, which is WAY too long for my uses, but just the right width/depth. So first I cut it down to 20" in length (I think it's 36"). I'll note that this thing is some thick metal, not cheap. I got it for $45 I think - which is far less than I'd spend to just buy raw steel and build one myself (and it's nicer than my work anyhow).

Plus I have leftover metal for future projects :)



Anyhow, I decided to chop out the center and basically fit it OVER the raised crossbeam section. This would allow me a lot of weldign contact points (including the ends) and keep it as low as possible as well (by like 1/2" but whatever...). That was a good bit of cutting...

but it fit up pretty well, and just barely left me clearance for the rear winch bolt holes.



Also if you don't remember, the OEM bumper was cut down in the middle for clearance. The bigger tray meant I had to cut it down a bit more.



And then out with the welder, which is a Hobart Handler and still took care of this thick metal with a good bit of slow work and multi-passes...



So with that done, I cleaned it all up, painted it, and put on a couple coats of bedliner. So let's install the winch now. It was pretty straightforward (other than cutting the too-long bolts for the fairlead)

As planned, just a bit of clearance between it and the grille to tuck it in as close as possible without any major cutting of the truck itself.



The winch came with a buss-bar for circuit breaker, but I couldn't find a good way to make it fit on the battery, and frankly don't want power to the winch when I'm not winching anyhow. So I re-used the Badlands on-off power switch (which is rated plenty high for the load of this winch), and didn't install the buss bar (though I may at some point, just as an extra safety step).



I also had to relocate my yellow fog/flood lights since they can't go where they were with this wider winch. In the end just stuck them upside-down below the winch plate, which actually worked out pretty well. We'll see if they get damaged down there but I think they'll be ok since the bumper over-riders stick out a bit further anyhow.



Note that the winch hook on this is massive...almost kind of funny how big it is ;)

So yeah, that's my self-congratulations for working my ass off at my job: A winch I'll use once or twice a year, and a full weekend of cutting, grinding, sweating, and welding lol.

 

irish44j

Rank II

Enthusiast III

We have a weekend trip coming up in a couple weekends, so have been doing some maintenance and also wanted to address the steering system. It has a few issues: 1) it's sloppy as hell, and I've adjusted all the remaining lash out of the gears/box but still, so much slop. 2) the box is leaking even more than it was - appears to be from the input seal from the steering shaft, but who knows. The whole things is coated with a muddy/greasy mix. 3) the idler arm is crunchy and noisy. I've always thought the one I got was a crappy design and figured it wouldn't last too long, and that's the case.

So, since I don't have time to do any real projects in the next week, for the moment I'll just settle for replacing the idler arm before this trip (and top off the PS fluid...)



So exciting. But at the same time, I ordered up some other stuff for the next stage of this project after I get back. One option was just to get a new/rebuilt steering box, but if I'm doing that I'm going to upgrade. A fairly common swap by the more hardcore Gen1 Pajero guys is to upgrade to the Gen2 steering stuff (Model year 93-99, IIRC). The main part of this is the beefier steering box, which basically bolts directly up in the same place/position as the Gen1 box (you have to open up one mount hole), and it has a bigger shaft as well, I think. It also has a quicker ratio and is known to be "touchy" compared to the Gen1 box - probably because the Gen2 uses a lower-pressure PS pump (which I cannot easily retrofit). So the word is you end up with a much more twitchy steering. We'll see - I'm used to the super-twitchy/light steering on the Sequoia, which is lightyears different from the Raider. Some guys say it's very twitchy, others say it's a more mild change.

So I ordered up one (seems like they're all the same made-in-China unit no matter where you look, but whatever, it seems fine quality)



Along with that, I'll need a new Pittman arm, for the different shaft/splines. The Gen2 pittman arm is a tad longer and a slightly different angle from the Gen1 but still clears everything fine. Some guy just run that and use the Gen1 idler arm. This messes up the geometry a bit but most guys don't seem to care. But why bother with that? The Gen2 idler arm assembly is basically a direct bolt-up as well. It has four bolts vs. three on the gen1 mount, but you basically just ignore the 4th one. Like the rest of teh stuff, it's way beefier than the Gen1 idler assembly/arm and looks a LOT stronger. I may actually weld a plate onto the frame for the 4th bolt as well, but we'll see. The guys who have made this change didn't, so it's probably fine without.

So there's the Gen2 on the left, and Gen1 on the right





So yeah, I'll tackle that in the next few weeks and see how it is. I'd do it after work this week, but don't like to make major changes so close to a trip.
 

irish44j

Rank II

Enthusiast III

Ok, time for another trip. This one is our annual jaunt out to Wolf Den Run and Big Run State Park in western MD, with a group of about a dozen people going. Wolf Den is great wheeling and scenery, and some other cool places around. But first, while packing I found that my spare bottle of gear oil had cracked and poured it all over my rear carpet....gross. So had to rip all that out and dump a bunch of baking soda all over the place smh...

Got all packed up, in the usual "how can I make stuff fit" style.



But eventually got packed up and no more gear oil smell.



So, moving on to the trip itself. First I headed up to Frederick to meet up with Jim around noon. He said he could use some help finishing up a few things.....well, it was a bit more than that, but nothing too bad. Had to do some wiring, make a panel, and reattach his GFC shell. Jim and his wife go on some serious long-distance overland trips (recently were out in Montana, etc.) so he's always upgrading the camping setup, equipment, power, etc.



In any case, we got on the road, and about halfway there. going up the LONG Sidling Hill upgrade I got boxed in by a car behind a truck coming up fast, had to jam the brakes and then did a hard downshift to try to regain speed in the next lane over......didn't think much of it until I cleared the crest, and then found my clutch on the floor. Pulled it back up with my toe, and for the rest of the trip there is was spongy and engagement wasn't great. Tried a few local (western MD) auto parts stores and of course nobody had a master cylinder, so pressed on. I still could clutch/shift but the feel was really bad and the engagement constantly changed. Typical MC problem (probably blew out a seal or something), but not gonna let that stop a weekend camping trip.

We got to the campsite at Big Run state park and a few folks were already there, and everyone got down to cooking and hanging out, setting up, etc.





Mike showed up in the XJ, and it reeked of gas. Old car stuff, right? Everyone sat down and ate/drank aorund the fire



I walked by his rig again and was like "damn it smells like gas" so looked underneath to see gas dripping from his tailpipe. Flowing down from a tiny hole in the side of his tank about halfway up ,which had been rubbing on something (possibly exhaust) and worn away. Mike got down to try to figure it out...



We couldn't figure anything out so just put a bucket down to catch the gas. The hole was around half a tank level so figured it would drain down. In the morning Mike backed up onto a rock to slosh the gas to the other side of the tank, and was able to dry off the area and use some JB Weld to plug the hole, which actually worked...



So we packed up and hit the road heading to Wolf Den Run, one of our favorite local wheeling areas - fun trails, some tough stuff, lots of water/mud, and great views. Some people had flats, a lot of people had to spray out their radiators from too much mud in them making cooling not go too well (I had 6 gallons in my pressurized tank, so that was useful). The clutch made some of the most difficult areas that I'd usually try...really difficult. I actually took a couple bypasses for the first time in memory since wasn't confident I had enough clutch feel to do a couple very long, very steep, very rocky sections that would be hard for a truck on 31s even in perfect shape. A couple of the more stock-ish Toyotas passed them too, so I didn't feel too bad. The bigger boys did them anyhow.

(stuff never looks as steep or rocky in photos lol, but even the XJ on 37s had a tough time through this area)


At some point stopped to wash out the radiator again and noticed.....my oil cap missing (!!!!). This being a Mitsubishi, I check the oil pretty often and did that morning and must have left the cap sitting on the IM and not on the filler. Luckily, the filler has an S-shaped hose to the valve cover so very little actually sprayed out from the valvetrain. And it's high enough on the engine that it was one of the only areas that DIDN'T have mud on it (whew). So had to improvise a cap on trail....



Good enough, we kept on keeping on. Here's some random pics from the day

Started out clean....


Didn't stay that way


























Also got a chance to do some flexing. Car actually teetered over when I got out to take the pic lol





---


Another night of camping, and enjoyed my morning coffee on the nearby stream



oh look, there's a spare oil cap buried in my spare parts kit...hooray



On Day 2 we took a more leisurely route to show some of the folks Dan's Rock (we went there last year, but it's always cool)





The guys were continuing on north, but with my clutch still wonky, A/C blowing warm, and running short on time I hit a gas station and headed home.



Spent the next day after work powerwashing everything for the upcoming steering project....skids need a bit of attention too lol



Anyhow, great weather and a fun trip. I'm pretty happy with the current camping setup (camped in the truck again this time) and my storage arrangement, so I don't have a ton of projects of that sort coming up for the moment, but who knows. Next post will be this week's project.
 

irish44j

Rank II

Enthusiast III

So, with the trip recap ^^^ out of the way, let's do steering. The original steering box is sloppy AF, and i've tightened the lash as much as possible to no avail. Plus, it leaks badly. One option would be to get a rebuilt box, replace, and call it a day. But I prefer an upgrade, and many over the years have swapped in the steering box and gear from the Gen2 Montero, which is bigger, beefier, and easier to find. It also has a quicker ratio and is said to be even a bit too responsive for many guys who do it (most on bigger tires than me). But I drive a GTI daily, and a Porsche so I like tight steering. So let's do that.

I posted pics of the new stuff a couple posts up, but mostly it looks like beefed up version of the original Gen1 stuff.

Getting the old box out was messy - lots of fluid, lots of muddy mess (even after powerwashing), and lots of figuring out the right angle to get it out

yum



Install of the new one wasn't much fun. It's a tight fit to get the old box out and the new one in, especially with the cruise control module there. But managed with a lot of cursing. The high and low pressure stock hoses fit perfectly, and are in the same place. The lower mount holes line up, but you have to substantially bore out/widen the upper holes to fit. Other guys say "a little" but it was more like 1/4" on each one, which took a while in the much thicker flanges on the new box..



But, eventually I got the box installed, along with new Pittman arm and a new idler arm on the other side (both from Gen2, which are way more stout than the Gen1 stuff, but have the same size balljoint tapers, so they fit perfectly. Getting the Pittman arm onto the new box's splines took a good deal of ugga-dugga from the impact (after cleaning/lightly filing some rough areas with a tiny file).

So, there it is (sorry about the blurriness)



Idler arm as you can see has four mount holes, but the original only had three (same spots though). The other guys who have done this just run with three bolts on the Gen2 idler, but I may add a steel plate up top for peace of mind, since I"m gonna be welding on a different vehicle tomorrow anyhow.



Went for a quick test drive and wow.....very responsive steering, like my cars. It's heavy-ish on center, which is good for staying in your lane, but you do have to be a bit more careful now since it turns quicker off-center and is lighter. Short-wheelbase 4x4 isn't a thing to do unintentional "too-rapid" lane changes in lol. But overall very happy with the feel. It's not twitchy like guys have said, but feels more like my Sequioa's steering (but heavier). Just what I was hoping for. So overall very pleased with this mod.
 

irish44j

Rank II

Enthusiast III

Headed out for another weekend trip with some of the usual crew to GWNF, up to Flagpole Knob and Reddish Knob. Done this trip several times, nothing too challenging but some nice views, good camping spots, and such. This was the first long drive with the new steering and after I got used to it I really enjoy the upgrade. Still have to pay a bit more attention on the road and not do anything "too quickly" but it's really great off the paved. Wheeling with actual steering response is way better than the 10 degrees of nothingness the old setup had. Overall, the Raider did fine for the trip other than the hard-start issue when it's cold (which apparently I will never solve, since I've run out of ideas on what could be causing it), but I think I do have a sticking injector. It's the 2nd one back on the passenger side, I know that, and it's not a spark issue. The injector is clicking/firing, but especially at idle I'm not sure any fuel is getting through. Seems to be okay when on heavier throttle, but I'll have to deal with it sooner or later.

On Saturday we met up with some new people, and some old friends and did an easy run down Peter's Mill so the Jeep guy could get his badge of honor thing. They've graded that run, so even the formerly kinda-tricky spots are pretty easy now, it's almost a 2wd trail entirely at this point, but whatever. RJ was working at the beginning doing promo for OnX and joined us later (damn that is a pretty cool wrap...)


There was also a guy with a Rivian in our group, who I followed for a while. Not that it was a hard trail, but it looked plenty capable from what I could see. In any case, neat to see one on the trail. The guy driving said he's frequently offroad and camping and stuff, so that's cool.



I also swapped vehicles with Eric for a few miles. He wanted to try out the Raider, so I cruised in his Touareg and took pics of my own rig




Later in the day as we were heading up to Reddish Knob on a rockier trail, there was some traffic....



IDK if this was a lost Uber Eats/Door Dash or what, but we followed him for a few miles (he didn't offer to move over) and he tackled some fairly sketchy areas (for a FWD stock Hyundai...). This is the trail that I towed Andy's Celica across three river crossings last spring that were about 2-3 ft. deep. Luckily for the Hyundai, it hasn't rained in forever and those crossings were just little tiny creeks this time.

Also crossed through a cow pasture, they seemed annoyed. But all the juveniles were excited and were running next to the cars as we went by. Mom wasn't happy.


Headed up to find a campsite in the dark, and appreciated my good lighting. The site had a couple big fallen trees right in the middle of it, so we had to do some winch-dragging and chainsawing to get situated (sorry, no pics)


After fires, beers, food, etc we crashed out and in the morning it was typically scenic while I drank my coffee




Then we headed out and immediately got hung up with another group coming the other way on a fairly narrow trail



These guys stopped for a sec to talk about how they used to have a Raider and had seen mine on a forum here or there. Obvs they have a hella nice rig as well....



We messed around while waiting for the other guys to get past the traffic. Who flexed better haha....





And Eric played in the one water spot we found...





We headed up to Reddish Knob to see some sights before rolling out home





Heading down the mountain I was annoyed at a big rock in my tire tread. Eventually once near Harrisonburg I pulled off and checked, and it was a roofing nail with a flat washer piece, through the thickest part of the tread block.



...but not thick enough. I pulled it out and listened to the air come out. So time to change tires in a business parking lot on a sunday morning with people coming from Brunch strolling by....lol



That also reminded me how inconvenient my jack/tool access is, as I had to pull a bunch of stuff out of the rig to get to it. Need to fix that problem.

On the way home on dreadful I-81, did catch up to a few guys coming back from a Range Rover meet (MARS?), with some nice rigs.




So, a pretty good trip overall. Only damage was a broken exhaust hangar, annoyingly, but secured it with some wire NBD. I did take some notes about things I want to fix / improve, including:
- the exhaust hangar
- GMRS mic mount (kept on falling out of the moutn in rough areas)
- jack/tool storage improvement (and continued refinement of storage overall)
- clean up some janky wiring and stuff
..and a few other things.

Since I'm a government employee and currently furloughed thanks to dumb politicians being dumb, I guess I'll have some time this week to do some projects :/
 

irish44j

Rank II

Enthusiast III

...and to follow on to that last post, this morning I drove to work, signed my furlough paperwork (yeah, have to do it in person, annoyingly), and headed home to do some projects in the perfect weather.

First up, something I've been meaning to do for a while. My Sequoia has an 8-foot awning on one side and a 55" or so Ironman awning on the other (along with shower enclosure). I don't use the short one often on the rig, but it's about 5" longer than the ARB awning on the back of the Raider, which I use constantly. A bit more coverage is aways good, and frankly I like the Ironman awnings slightly better than the ARB. They're pretty similar, but the IM ones have a few little features I appreciate (and easier zippers). So spent and hour swapping them. Plus, the gray cover on the ARB always annoyed me from a color standpoint, didn't match the rest of the rig haha....so small victory there.



Also got Amazon package of something to solve the GMRS mic issue, trucker-style. Note: I really like this thing, it's well-made and super-convenient.



On to interior. First, time to get rid of the janky plastic interior panels. They were once tan, painted black, chipped and scratched, and look ugly. They have no insualtion or anything, and make wiring inconvenient. Goodbye:


Underneath, the metal is actually gray so I'm going to cover it all in matte black vinyl later this week.


Also looks like whatever cover goes over the rear vents is missing, so will have to fab up something for that...


With that done, next project is storage. First, need better access to my tool box. It's heavy with the big bottle jack in it and hard as hell to get out when the truck is packed. So with a few hinges added, now access is better!



The area over the passenger wheel well is mostly dead space with the fridge there (as you can see in the previous pic). It's not very flat, and anything you put there falls down into the fridge slider track. So out with the saw, and some scrap wood (from my old sleeping platform)


Basically, made a "container" of sorts (along with a front partition). And lookie-lookie, it fits my two large tool rolls, and a big Fkin hammer and prybar, and some other stuff just perfectly. Now I don't have to keep these elsewhere, where they were hard to get to and/or not stowed well. So really happy with this setup.



I do have a few other things ongoing, but will update those once I'm done.
 
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