To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

ARB bumper repair

SteveH-CO

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
283
Location
Southern Colorado
I bought an ARB bumper that was side-swiped by a minivan. The face piece (1.5" wide by 1/8" thick) is bent aside, and so is the support plate behind it.

Fixing this would be easier if the entire bumper were not nicely factory powder coated - I'd just cut it all off and weld away. The bumper is more than 100#, so my plan is to mount it on my truck ('89 FJ62 Land Cruiser), park near a tree, and attempt to pull and bend this bumper face flange back, straightening the support piece behind it. I doubt it will look nice when I'm done, but my on-the-truck operation might straighten the support plate, if nothing else.

Question: should I just cut off the face piece right away, and re-bend the support plate (maybe with heat as needed) and weld on the new face, skipping any attempt to push the face piece back?

After the support is straight, I will bend a new face piece, weld it, and paint it. I see no way to powder coat any of my repair pieces, since they will be welded to the bumper.

Thoughts? - thanks!

Steve
 

Attachments

  • Bumper1.jpg
    Bumper1.jpg
    482.4 KB · Views: 155
  • Bumper2.jpg
    Bumper2.jpg
    301.4 KB · Views: 138
  • Bumper3.jpg
    Bumper3.jpg
    332.8 KB · Views: 143
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

archtimb

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 18, 2017
Messages
134
I bought an ARB bumper that was side-swiped by a minivan. The face piece (1.5" wide by 1/8" thick) is bent aside, and so is the support plate behind it.

Fixing this would be easier if the entire bumper were not nicely factory powder coated - I'd just cut it all off and weld away. The bumper is more than 100#, so my plan is to mount it on my truck ('89 FJ62 Land Cruiser), park near a tree, and attempt to pull and bend this bumper face flange back, straightening the support piece behind it. I doubt it will look nice when I'm done, but my on-the-truck operation might straighten the support plate, if nothing else.

Question: should I just cut off the face piece right away, and re-bend the support plate (maybe with heat as needed) and weld on the new face, skipping any attempt to push the face piece back?

After the support is straight, I will bend a new face piece, weld it, and paint it. I see no way to powder coat any of my repair pieces, since they will be welded to the bumper.

Thoughts? - thanks!

Steve
Careful. That 3FE might just uproot the tree! Kidding.
I'm with Ape. I would go at it cold with a big wrench. Only heat if really needed.
FYI I had my old ARB powder coated to put on another FJ62 last year. Wasn't cheap at about $600, but when a new one is now going for about a grand, a good option if looks matter to you.
Now, let's see your cruiser!
 
OP
S

SteveH-CO

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
283
Location
Southern Colorado
I tried an adjustable wrench on the (cold) bent metal - no way! The metal is too thick to easily bend that way. The FJ62 has 268K miles, bought it from a neighbor (original owner) and did some rust/paint/interior repair. Original engine and transmission, no leaks.
 

Attachments

  • DSCN7333 - Blur.JPG
    DSCN7333 - Blur.JPG
    315.5 KB · Views: 95
  • DSCN7326.JPG
    DSCN7326.JPG
    474.3 KB · Views: 76
  • S60WC - Blur.jpg
    S60WC - Blur.jpg
    635 KB · Views: 86
OP
S

SteveH-CO

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
283
Location
Southern Colorado
I cut off the old upright, straightened the support, and then fabbed and installed a new upright. I bolted it to the existing bumper, which solved the welding problem. Not perfect, but close enough. The powder coater put on a ton of satin black.
 

Attachments

  • DSCN6892.JPG
    DSCN6892.JPG
    539.2 KB · Views: 55
  • DSCN6894_brighter.jpg
    DSCN6894_brighter.jpg
    1,011.1 KB · Views: 53
  • DSCN6895.JPG
    DSCN6895.JPG
    971.2 KB · Views: 64

4xdog

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 18, 2012
Messages
5,595
Location
Santa Fe, NM
Boy, that's a complicated part of an ARB bullbar, @SteveH-CO. Your repair looks quite good.

Is that one still in production? Your effort and powdercoating costs might have made simple replacement with a new one a reasonable option. The bullbar on my Gen 1 Tacoma is almost fifteen years old now and the powdercoat is weathering. I've thought about having it recoated, but haven't gotten any quotes yet...
 

slowtwitch73

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 18, 2019
Messages
5,876
Location
Hellgate
Throw that **** in the recycle bin. Just a bunch of weight hangin off the front that does zero for performance or deer hits.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
OP
S

SteveH-CO

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
283
Location
Southern Colorado
This particular (old style FJ60) ARB is no longer in production. The current FJ60/2 model sits higher and blocks the FJ62 turn signals in the valence.

This one was $450 used/bent, and a new one with tax is close to $1500. I read of someone having an entire bumper blasted and re-powder coated, and it was $600 to do so. My bumper had been garaged, so the powder coating is in nice shape, save for a few hacks from the minivan attack. This whole effort was a silly 'project' - but it was fun in a way. I'm simply too cheap to write a big check like that.

On Mud as 'SteveH'
 

Bigblue&Goldie

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 12, 2009
Messages
10,661
Location
AZ
Throw that **** in the recycle bin. Just a bunch of weight hangin off the front that does zero for performance or deer hits.

Down in Mexico we plowed 2 cows on the highway in an OBS Ford Super Duty. We got lucky in that it didn't blow the radiator, but it did crack the aftermarket trans cooler. We were able to re-route the trans lines through the OEM cooler built into the radiator. We all agreed that if it was any of the newer trucks in our group it would've been disabled due to all the coolers that would've been damaged. Grill guards serve a purpose when smashing animals. Sure, your body work will still get damaged, but the grill guard might be the protection that allows you to drive home.
 

slowtwitch73

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 18, 2019
Messages
5,876
Location
Hellgate
Guaranteed expense up front, guaranteed hit to mileage, guaranteed extra wear and tear on front end, guaranteed heavier steering for the possibility it *may* help (may not) in a fairly unlikely scenario.

Your trucks may have faired the same without the guards... sometimes its worse having them as the animal gets stuck to the front instead of bouncing off to side, under etc.

That's my take on em. Get off my lawn.:beer:
 
OP
S

SteveH-CO

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
283
Location
Southern Colorado
Guaranteed expense up front, guaranteed hit to mileage, guaranteed extra wear and tear on front end, guaranteed heavier steering for the possibility it *may* help (may not) in a fairly unlikely scenario.

Yes, and this truck has 262K on the original engine and transmission, and the trunnion bearings in the front end are still original and smooth. It will take more than 75 additional pounds on the front end to kill the suspension. Mileage? I get 11-12 most of the time, and 14-15 on the highway at low speeds. And a remarkable 4.78 MPG offroad on Black Bear pass. I measure my fun in smiles per gallon ;-)
 

Attachments

  • BlackBearSummit.jpg
    BlackBearSummit.jpg
    844.7 KB · Views: 34
  • BlackBearFromImogine.jpg
    BlackBearFromImogine.jpg
    850 KB · Views: 44

mrvm

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 12, 2014
Messages
3,838
Location
PA
Throw that **** in the recycle bin. Just a bunch of weight hangin off the front that does zero for performance or deer hits.
I’d agree if you’re referring to the cheap crappy non-ARB grill guards that mount onto the radiator support and easily bend on impact resulting in extra damage the hood, headlights and grill.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom