4 x 4 Australia

This Hilux sets the standard for future customs.

BUILDING A CUTTING-EDGE 4X4 IS ALL ABOUT WHO YOU KNOW.

- WORDS DAN EVERETT

MAX THE OWNER NOW FALLS SMACKBANG IN THE MIDDLE OF THE PILE OF GIANTS

IF I HAVE seen further, it’s only by standing on the shoulders of giants.” It’s a concept that’s been thrown around for centuries now, and it raises the idea that no man or woman alone is responsibl­e for everything they’ve achieved. Instead, they’re given a head start by the people who built the foundation­s. Neil Armstrong wouldn’t have put a foot on the moon without the Wright brothers first taking flight; Land Cruisers wouldn’t exist without the original Jeeps; and just about every popular modificati­on on your 4x4 wouldn’t exist without the people willing to experiment and lay the groundwork. Max, the bloke who owns the one-of-akind N80 Hilux you’re ogling, now falls smack-bang in the middle of the pile of giants. Over the last 15 odd years he’s earned himself a reputation of being the first to roll up his sleeves and figure things out, helping create the methods that people replicate on their own 4x4s for years later. As a result, when the time came to step up from his wild N70 Hilux into the new N80 platform, Max, and a bunch of industry contacts he’s made over the years, were all too ready to get to work. Like most 4x4s, Max’s Hilux rides on a

solid foundation that ties the whole build together. “I’ve always been an advocate for keeping IFS vehicles low,” Max tells us. “Improvemen­t in approach and departure angles will give you more benefit than lift, in order to run larger tyres.”

In keeping with that theme the front of the Hilux now sits just 50mm above standard ride height thanks to a combinatio­n of high-end gear. The big player is the Monster Rides/ksp Matrix struts. Despite just two inches increase in ride height, they’re wrapped in progressiv­e coils and fully adjustable dampening to get the ride quality dialled in. A pair of Monster Rides/ksp upper control arms help keep things in alignment, while the Phat Bars diff drop gets the CV angle back near stock for maximum strength.

The rear end takes that low and stable approach to the next level. Rather than swapping in an off-the-shelf leaf-spring arrangemen­t, Max has had the load leaves in the stock spring pack reset to handle a little more weight; while 75mm extended shackles bump ride height up 25mm over stock. They’re paired with a set of threeinch-longer Rekon rear shocks, which give the Hilux an OEM ride with extra flex and load-carrying ability thrown in the mix.

With the extra increase in ride and height, Max set out to make the most of it. Starting from a solid foundation, Max

yanked the factory diff gears out of both ends and replaced them with 4.8-ratio gears from Nitro Gear, a serious upgrade from the 3.9 the ’Lux rolled off the production line with. The front gear set has also been wrapped around a Harrop Elocker, giving Max twin-locked capability at the push of a button. The new driveline components allow the 2.8-litre turbo-diesel to effortless­ly spin the 305/70R17 Maxxis RAZR tyres on each corner (that’s a 34.1 x 13 x 17 for those playing at home). They’re wrapped around gunmetal grey 17 x 8.5 0-offset alloy wheels, giving the Hilux that cooler-than-cool dark running theme.

There’s no such thing as a free lunch; and with Max trying to stuff as big a tyre in the guards as possible while keeping the Hilux low, eventually things would start fouling. To make the ’Lux live up to its full potential he reached for the grinder and set to work.

“I’ve never been scared to get a grinder onto a new vehicle,” he told us. “Low centre of gravity is where it’s at. The suspension works better and off-camber stability helps in the harder off-roading we have in Australia.”

Starting from the front, Max started sculpting back the Hilux’s front guards with the 1mm grinding disc. The front edge was pushed 20mm further out, 25mm of clearance was added on the upper edge, with a huge 35mm cut off the guard’s rear edge. Max then made a new inner liner to keep debris out of the door jam, painted her up, and installed a set of schmick 55mm Ambassador Industrial flares to tie

the whole look together.

Moving underneath and it becomes all too obvious this Hilux is built for serious off-road work. Starting from the front, 5mm-thick steel plates have been built from scratch by the guys at Phat Bars in Queensland’s south-east. They protect the engine’s sump, transmissi­on and transfer case from wayward rocks and tripending tree stumps. Moving rearwards, Max had Lethal Customs fabricate a 5mm-thick replacemen­t steel skid plate to protect the fuel tank. Finally, Max teamed up with the guys at Performanc­e Suspension Racing to build a Tacoma-inspired rear diff centre and pinion guard from 6mm-thick steel, protecting the diff itself and the uni joints from off-road damage.

Up front the choice was obvious, with Max’s long-time friend David Fitzpatric­k starting a new venture as Offroad Animal (he was previously behind Uneek 4x4). The ‘Predator’ bar currently fitted was 3D-modelled and designed off Max’s Hilux, so it fits bang on. It houses two Stedi LED light bars as well as the Runva 13XP winch. Phat Bars rock sliders protect vulnerable sheetmetal, while the prototype N80 backbone system from Rhinorack holds the flat rack in place, as well as a 42-inch LED light bar and two roll-out awnings.

On the tail-end Max put the Lethal Customs team to work again. After countless back-andforth discussion­s about how a touring tray in the tight Victorian tracks should look and perform, work finally got under way. Leigh, the main man at Lethal, got to work turning

Max’s ideas from paper into reality. The hit list was a hard one to stick to: it couldn’t sit any wider than the body of the Hilux; it couldn’t extend any farther than the chassis rails; it needed to house the spare tyre as low as possible while still protecting it; and it needed to have plenty of hidden storage for recovery gear. After a few weeks of fabricatio­n and a test fit or two, the tray was finally on the Hilux and a smile on Max’s face. Leigh’s welder came out one more time after the tray was fitted to tie the tray and front bar into the rock sliders, with reinforcin­g in the tray giving Max peace of mind he can put the Hilux in situations that’d eat up a lesser rig.

Swing open the battleship-grey doors and Max’s build philosophy really starts shining through. Like the outside, it’s built for a purpose. An idrive unit allows him to dial in throttle response depending on the conditions, and a screen-mirroring unit allows the factory entertainm­ent unit to display his mapping software for an eagle-eyed view of the terrain. It’s strangely fitting that in such a cutting-edge 4x4, oldschool simplicity gives such good results. If you’re after a seriously capable rock crawler or tourer, the right modificati­ons are far more important than all the modificati­ons.

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 ?? PHOTOS NATHAN JACOBS ??
PHOTOS NATHAN JACOBS
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 ??  ?? Max and his oneof-a-kind Hilux creation. MAX’S THEOREM Maintainin­g a low centre of gravity on vehicles is central to Max’s N80 Hilux modificati­ons.
Max and his oneof-a-kind Hilux creation. MAX’S THEOREM Maintainin­g a low centre of gravity on vehicles is central to Max’s N80 Hilux modificati­ons.
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 ??  ?? ARMOUR GUARD Underneath, off-road protection from Phat Bars includes 5mm-thick steel plates for the sump, transmissi­on and transfer case, as well as a skid plate for the fuel tank.
ARMOUR GUARD Underneath, off-road protection from Phat Bars includes 5mm-thick steel plates for the sump, transmissi­on and transfer case, as well as a skid plate for the fuel tank.
 ??  ?? The front Harrop Elocker provides push-button traction.
Lethal Customs created the neat rear tray to Max’s
exacting specificat­ions. SPRING TIME For the rear end, the load leaves of the stock springs were reset to take more weight, with extended shackles and three-inch longer Rekon shocks added.
The front Harrop Elocker provides push-button traction. Lethal Customs created the neat rear tray to Max’s exacting specificat­ions. SPRING TIME For the rear end, the load leaves of the stock springs were reset to take more weight, with extended shackles and three-inch longer Rekon shocks added.
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