Progress (well, a little progress, at least)
HOORAY! The bushes arrived!!!
Woo-Hoo.
Then I had to remove the old bushes.
UPPER CONTROL ARMS - easy. Before hitting them with drill or flame, I squirted CRC into them and just pushed them out. As I said, easy!
LOWER (FRONT) CONTROL ARMS (in the front of the chassis) - I don't like these. Not at all.
I made a press from a piece of thick-walled tube (cut off an old tow bar) and a bit of 6mm plate welded across the end, with a hole for a bolt in the middle. This got the centre bush out, as well as some of the rubber. I thought about burning the rest of the rubber out, but decided to put a rotary wire brush in my pistol drill and that worked a treat.
I opened the pack of new bushes and discovered the ones I bought require the REMOVAL of the outer tube as well. D'oh!
I turned a piece of 8mm plate to the exact size of the bush in my lathe and used a huge socket and a bolt as a press. Total failure - the tube would not move. Attacked it with the air chisel and 10 mins later there were a couple of bits of mangled steel tube on the floor and a couple of holes that the new bushes would fit into. Lots of Lithium grease and the new ones went in.
Hooray! Reassembly can begin!
Fitted new bushes in both control arms and loosely bolted them up. Bolted the driveshafts on and then noticed that the nearside driveshaft bearing in the front diff was rather sloppy. The bearing allowed a couple of mm of up/down travel, which was a couple of mm too much....
Checked the diff in the parts truck and it looked great.
Dropped the front diff and cross member out and swapped it over with the diff in the parts truck. Put the driveshafts on (again).
The day was hot, so we worked in different areas of the truck, basically following the shade. Noticed the diff in the parts truck had an 80L Diesel tank, whereas mine had a 60L, so I began unbolting it. Not out, but started...
While around there, I removed the centre tail shaft bearing and replaced it with a new one. I ripped the shocks off and cracked all the nuts on the rear leaf springs, ready for the Ironman upgrade.
I removed the tow bar (I have a MONSTER bumper to go on - this has an integrated tow hitch and will also carry the spare-wheel carrier - once I make the spare-wheel carrier and mount it) and discovered it was W-A-Y past beer O'clock, so we called it a day and drank beer.
Now waiting on hub grease seals (from Nissan - Ex-East) before we can get the rest together.
Maybe only 25,000 hours left and it'll be drivable...