Hello everyone. New guy here. I have a 2001 Sequoia Limited 4WD with about 245,000 miles that has lived it’s life in the north. I’m in Florida now for the winter, and she (her name is Sequoiagawea) just suffered a major setback.
I don’t even know what to call it, but there is a tubular structural member that runs across the rear end between the frames that some control arms and such connect to, and it has rusted almost all the way through. (See photos)
One of the brackets has rusted completely away from it, so I get a noticeable drop on the rear end when accelerating from a stop. It seems to handle pretty decent still, but obviously this is not good long term.
I found a local welder who is willing to take a crack at sistering some metal on the cross member, and re-mount the bracket in some fashion. He said it will cost between $250 and $400. There is some risk to the brake lines which run right through the area.
Anybody ever see anything this severe before? What would you do if you were me? I’m not a hard core DIY guy like many of you seem to be. I just want it as a daily driver. It’s pretty beat up, but still drives quiet and is super reliable. It’s my second Sequoia, and probably my 15th or 20th Toyota. I bought it with 194,000 miles for $3700, and put a couple grand into the front end. So it has long since earned it’s keep.
Thanks for any useful opinions you can share.
Doug
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
I don’t even know what to call it, but there is a tubular structural member that runs across the rear end between the frames that some control arms and such connect to, and it has rusted almost all the way through. (See photos)
One of the brackets has rusted completely away from it, so I get a noticeable drop on the rear end when accelerating from a stop. It seems to handle pretty decent still, but obviously this is not good long term.
I found a local welder who is willing to take a crack at sistering some metal on the cross member, and re-mount the bracket in some fashion. He said it will cost between $250 and $400. There is some risk to the brake lines which run right through the area.
Anybody ever see anything this severe before? What would you do if you were me? I’m not a hard core DIY guy like many of you seem to be. I just want it as a daily driver. It’s pretty beat up, but still drives quiet and is super reliable. It’s my second Sequoia, and probably my 15th or 20th Toyota. I bought it with 194,000 miles for $3700, and put a couple grand into the front end. So it has long since earned it’s keep.
Thanks for any useful opinions you can share.
Doug
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk