1. Welcome to Tundras.com!

    You are currently viewing as a guest! To get full-access, you need to register for a FREE account.

    As a registered member, you’ll be able to:
    • Participate in all Tundra discussion topics
    • Transfer over your build thread from a different forum to this one
    • Communicate privately with other Tundra owners from around the world
    • Post your own photos in our Members Gallery
    • Access all special features of the site

Some frame rust. Lots of pics

Discussion in '1st Gen Tundras (2000-2006)' started by DBombs, Jan 27, 2025.

  1. Jan 27, 2025 at 1:52 PM
    #1
    DBombs

    DBombs [OP] I Like Old Trucks

    Joined:
    May 15, 2022
    Member:
    #78413
    Messages:
    107
    Gender:
    Male
    NE Atlanta
    Vehicle:
    2006 Tundra DC SR5 V8 4x4 TRD
    I am finding some rust I missed. Specifically, the parts delaminating concern me. Let me know if you want different or better pics of specific things.

    Which of these issues do you see that are a problem and what solutions do you suggest?

    Truck has 200k miles and 1 previous owner was in south Tennessee. I plan to own the truck a long time


    IMG_8144.jpg IMG_8143.jpg IMG_8142.jpg IMG_8141.jpg IMG_8140.jpg IMG_8139.jpg IMG_8138.jpg IMG_8137.jpg IMG_8136.jpg IMG_8135.jpg IMG_8132.jpg IMG_8131.jpg IMG_8130.jpg IMG_8129.jpg IMG_8128.jpg IMG_8125.jpg IMG_8124.jpg IMG_8123.jpg IMG_8122.jpg IMG_8121.jpg IMG_8120.jpg IMG_8119.jpg IMG_8117.jpg IMG_8116.jpg IMG_8114.jpg IMG_8113.jpg IMG_8112.jpg IMG_8111.jpg IMG_8110.jpg
     
  2. Jan 27, 2025 at 1:58 PM
    #2
    Jack McCarthy

    Jack McCarthy Working remotely from the local pub

    Joined:
    Nov 2, 2020
    Member:
    #54409
    Messages:
    10,266
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Bill
    North of Boston
    Vehicle:
    02 Tundra AC SR5 V8 4x4
    It’s interesting how the bed bolt shaft literally disintegrated. There’s not much holding the screw on the top half but I think the threads are set further down.
     
    FrenchToasty likes this.
  3. Jan 27, 2025 at 2:33 PM
    #3
    shifty`

    shifty` I'm having daydreams about night things

    Joined:
    Jun 20, 2020
    Member:
    #48239
    Messages:
    28,408
    ATL
    Vehicle:
    '06 AC Limited V8/4WD
    (see signature for truck info)
    I don't see anything to necessarily get britches in a twist over. But here's some commentary.

    Obviously, this delam is not great, but the actual frame itself is still fully intact, it's just the stiffener portion (on both sides, interestingly) that's shot. I mean, sucks because nobody makes that part, and this reeks of part failure to me, specifically I don't think the steel was manufactured correctly, but ...

    upload_2025-1-27_17-27-39.png

    Is that a hole in the circle there? Also, LSPV can be replaced or swapped for a standard PV, Wilwood has one, and FirstGenTundras makes a kit.

    upload_2025-1-27_17-28-19.png

    This caught my eye,tire carrier looks like it has a hole rotted thru it, or is it an optical illusion? It's not going to impact structurally with this little bit, but I'd probably want to deal with it, grind out the rust to clean metal, then treat.

    upload_2025-1-27_17-29-32.png

    I'm tempted to bet you money the bed bolts are seized with how ate-up the sleeves inside the standoff are. Maybe it's purely exterior rust. But after what @jpink and @FirstGenVol went through getting his bed off... yikes.

    upload_2025-1-27_17-30-50.png

    But more concerning for me, what the actual fuck is all over your gas tank? Is it leaking? Did your rear diff vent breather (blue circle) fail, and explode hot gear oil all over the gas tank? (A quick wipe and sniff of the oil would confirm if it's gear oil, gear oil smells like dinosaur decomp mixed with metal grindings)

    upload_2025-1-27_17-32-52.png
     
    Sean492, G_unit3000 and BroHon like this.
  4. Jan 27, 2025 at 2:57 PM
    #4
    FiatRunner

    FiatRunner 2003 rich

    Joined:
    Nov 25, 2022
    Member:
    #87321
    Messages:
    1,118
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Jack
    Chicago Suburbs/Milwaukee
    Vehicle:
    2000 AC Limited TRD + 4WD + Thunder Gray
    See Refresh Thread (link in signature)
    What shifty said. Frame looks good.

    Some of those spots he mentioned would benefit from some rust removal and repainting, but based on your location, I really wouldn't worry about it. You could spray some Fluid Film or Blaster Surface Shield on those locations- and I doubt they would get much worse. Definitely take a look at that oil residue he mentioned though.
     
    G_unit3000 likes this.
  5. Jan 27, 2025 at 2:58 PM
    #5
    bfunke

    bfunke Tundra Curmudgeon

    Joined:
    Oct 13, 2019
    Member:
    #37321
    Messages:
    2,402
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Bryan
    South Carolina
    Vehicle:
    2018 SR-5 CM 5.7, 2000 SR-5 AC 4.7L
    Is that really a GA truck or a yankee transplant?
     
    G_unit3000 likes this.
  6. Jan 27, 2025 at 3:01 PM
    #6
    FiatRunner

    FiatRunner 2003 rich

    Joined:
    Nov 25, 2022
    Member:
    #87321
    Messages:
    1,118
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Jack
    Chicago Suburbs/Milwaukee
    Vehicle:
    2000 AC Limited TRD + 4WD + Thunder Gray
    See Refresh Thread (link in signature)
    Wayyyyyyyy too clean to be from any of the states that salt the roads.
     
  7. Jan 27, 2025 at 3:19 PM
    #7
    PNW15

    PNW15 New Member

    Joined:
    Aug 19, 2023
    Member:
    #102399
    Messages:
    215
    Gender:
    Male
    WA
    Vehicle:
    2006 DC V8 4WD
    Not the best, certainly not the worst. This frame has a long life ahead if some of these areas are cleaned up. Not sure what the solution is at the stiffeners... Personally I'd fluid film it after getting it all wire wheeled and prepped.
     
  8. Jan 27, 2025 at 3:23 PM
    #8
    DBombs

    DBombs [OP] I Like Old Trucks

    Joined:
    May 15, 2022
    Member:
    #78413
    Messages:
    107
    Gender:
    Male
    NE Atlanta
    Vehicle:
    2006 Tundra DC SR5 V8 4x4 TRD
    Great commentary. Thank you. I got a few more pics to speak directly to the points highlighted.

    The failing stiffener portions, try to remove as much flake/rust as possible and then coat it with fluid film or oil? Any sense in trying to patch with something fabricated?

    Thankfully not a hole in the cross brace near the LSPV. Must have been crud on the lense or a weird shadow, idk.
    IMG_8153.jpg

    While not a hole on the end of the frame of the tire carrier, it’s in bad shape. I could rip off flakes and chunks.
    IMG_8155.jpg IMG_8156.jpg

    Suggestions on the bed bolt sleeves? See about removing the bolts and replacing? Get a new sleeve?

    Weird one on the gas tank. It seems to only be mist/humidity from the air. It was rainy this morning and damp here today. Got some mist on lots of things in the carport. There is no odor to it. Not like gas or oil to the touch. I’ll watch that closely but it looks to only be water from the weather. Got some closer pics and specifically the wires and area around the diff vent breather are dry.
    IMG_8158.jpg IMG_8157.jpg
     
  9. Jan 27, 2025 at 3:37 PM
    #9
    Jack McCarthy

    Jack McCarthy Working remotely from the local pub

    Joined:
    Nov 2, 2020
    Member:
    #54409
    Messages:
    10,266
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Bill
    North of Boston
    Vehicle:
    02 Tundra AC SR5 V8 4x4
    I don’t think you can replace the sleeves as they’re part of the bed the bolts slide through and screw into the frame. Most you can do is clean it up as best as possible or buy a used bed which is too much to ask for a sleeve or two.

    I would definitely consider removing the frame reinforcement and fabbing a new one to put in there. That’s going to be difficult to maintain with all the small areas salt and water can get trapped.

    Normally I’d say don’t worry if you live in the South but considering the recent snow & saltfest, that is a little concerning.
     
    Last edited: Jan 27, 2025
  10. Jan 27, 2025 at 4:48 PM
    #10
    FiatRunner

    FiatRunner 2003 rich

    Joined:
    Nov 25, 2022
    Member:
    #87321
    Messages:
    1,118
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Jack
    Chicago Suburbs/Milwaukee
    Vehicle:
    2000 AC Limited TRD + 4WD + Thunder Gray
    See Refresh Thread (link in signature)
    The mist on the gas tank must be condensation from the fuel.

    It must've cooled down overnight, and stayed cool into the day when it got warmer, and sweat like a glass of ice water. Interesting!
     
    BroHon, shifty` and whodatschrome like this.
  11. Jan 27, 2025 at 5:01 PM
    #11
    DBombs

    DBombs [OP] I Like Old Trucks

    Joined:
    May 15, 2022
    Member:
    #78413
    Messages:
    107
    Gender:
    Male
    NE Atlanta
    Vehicle:
    2006 Tundra DC SR5 V8 4x4 TRD
    Ya, seeing stuff other than sand get put on the roads around here was not fun. Had to borrow the in-laws car for the day:D
     
    Jack McCarthy[QUOTED] likes this.
  12. Jan 27, 2025 at 5:03 PM
    #12
    whodatschrome

    whodatschrome New Member

    Joined:
    Sep 13, 2023
    Member:
    #103882
    Messages:
    1,788
    Gender:
    Male
    North of North Plains, Oregon
    Vehicle:
    2000 Tundra 4wd AC, 2004 Tundra AC 2wd to 4wd conversion ABS delete
    lots of dents
    The rust doesn’t look too bad…well compared to most rust belt vehicles. To mitigate the existing rust as much as possible, i’d grab 4 friends and remove the bed. Start soaking the threaded portion of the bed bolts with penetrating oil now, then make a plan to remove the bed in a week or so. You can set the bed on 2 sawhorses or 2 haybales. Borrow, rent, or steal a higher powdered (3500psi minimum) pressure washer. Use a zero degree tip to blast most of the rust out of those hard to reach cracks and crevices. Wear eye protection, cause you’ll definitely need it. Then attack it with a wire wheel. Then blast it against with the pressure washer. Let dry then spray everything down with purple power cleaner, then blast it one last time with the pressure washer. Let dry, then spray it down with fluid film. Spray inside the frame as well.
     
    G_unit3000 likes this.
  13. Jan 27, 2025 at 5:23 PM
    #13
    DBombs

    DBombs [OP] I Like Old Trucks

    Joined:
    May 15, 2022
    Member:
    #78413
    Messages:
    107
    Gender:
    Male
    NE Atlanta
    Vehicle:
    2006 Tundra DC SR5 V8 4x4 TRD
    Hmm, good info on addressing some of this for the long term by getting the bed off and really getting access to some of this stuff. My mind had not gone down that road but I like it. I’ll add it to my list. I’m going to address some stuff in the bed anyway at some point, probably a DIY spray in bed liner behind the drop in liner. Will be good projects for some warmer weather
     
  14. Jan 27, 2025 at 7:09 PM
    #14
    shifty`

    shifty` I'm having daydreams about night things

    Joined:
    Jun 20, 2020
    Member:
    #48239
    Messages:
    28,408
    ATL
    Vehicle:
    '06 AC Limited V8/4WD
    (see signature for truck info)
    If you're sweating the frame pieces that are delam'd, note there is a way to pull them off a donor frame if you can find one. I've explained a few times but happy to share again. A frame that's been T-boned, or has major front end damage would work fine.
     
    whodatschrome likes this.
  15. Jan 27, 2025 at 7:28 PM
    #15
    DBombs

    DBombs [OP] I Like Old Trucks

    Joined:
    May 15, 2022
    Member:
    #78413
    Messages:
    107
    Gender:
    Male
    NE Atlanta
    Vehicle:
    2006 Tundra DC SR5 V8 4x4 TRD
    Thank you, good point. I may well do that. Prioritizing and slowly working through everything I need/want to do. I definitely want to address some of those bad spots under there
     
  16. Jan 27, 2025 at 7:54 PM
    #16
    badass03taco

    badass03taco New Member

    Joined:
    Mar 8, 2024
    Member:
    #113307
    Messages:
    425
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Adam
    Vehicle:
    2005 Limited Double Cab 4wd
    Gas tank is sweating, happens with humidity, you'd be surprised at how this can separate the water from the ethanol in your tank. Running 100% gasoline you dont see this happen, but with ethanol blend you do. You can see the garage concrete sweating too, quite common on those drizzly mornings.

    The frame is not in terrible shape, not the best shape, but good for many more miles if you do some rust treatment and coatings soon.
    That delaminated brace has the bottom of the frame rail pooched down, and the side of the frame bowed out. Definitely not my favorite thing to see but its kinda.... Meh... normal on these trucks. Mine is that way too, i took a drill and small drill bit and drilled in the middle of the flaky layers all the way back to the main frame rail and used the red straw on the fluid film to spray back in behind the layers to try to let the fluid film soak down behind the frame brace. You would be surprised at how well fluid film "walks" on a frame and my hopes are that it coats everything behind and between the stiffener brace and the frame rail. I sprayed inside my frame rails good too up front where the square boxed hole is in front of the A pillar cab mounts. Basically in the back of the front wheel well. I would do everything you can to mitigate the rust, and then coat it with something to try to keep moisture out of the frame. The guy above that said pressure wash everything 3 times.... Meh.... I personally wouldnt, every ounce of water you get inside the flaky layers, is water that will continue to cause those layers to rust. I try not to drive my truck if its raining, i try to keep it dry as much as i can even though i used rust converter on the whole frame twice, and then coated it with fluid film. I still know that its the moisture getting in everything that causes the rust. You do whatever you feel is right but me personally i wouldnt use a pressure washer to try to fight off rust.
     
    DBombs[OP] likes this.
  17. Jan 28, 2025 at 4:49 AM
    #17
    G_unit3000

    G_unit3000 New Member

    Joined:
    Jun 25, 2024
    Member:
    #118959
    Messages:
    189
    First Name:
    Gman
    North East
    Vehicle:
    2005 Tundra DC 4x4
    This frame rust looks to be the perfect use case for an air needle scaler.
     
    tvpierce and DBombs[OP] like this.
  18. Jan 28, 2025 at 6:15 AM
    #18
    DBombs

    DBombs [OP] I Like Old Trucks

    Joined:
    May 15, 2022
    Member:
    #78413
    Messages:
    107
    Gender:
    Male
    NE Atlanta
    Vehicle:
    2006 Tundra DC SR5 V8 4x4 TRD
    What rust converter did you use? I’ve experimented with some on bumpers, trailers, yard equipment, and found it was good for surface rust to light rust, but anything thicker (even after removing what I could with brushes, etc) would not fully convert. Only the outer layer would. The concern in that case is there is still rust underneath. Not sure if the converter encapsulates it enough to keep out air and moisture and prevent anything further. I don’t understand the chemistry of rust very well
     
  19. Jan 28, 2025 at 6:20 AM
    #19
    w666

    w666 D. None of the above

    Joined:
    Dec 17, 2019
    Member:
    #40020
    Messages:
    1,756
    Gender:
    Male
    Maryland
    Vehicle:
    04 Access Cab SR5 V8 4WD
    None yet
    I like either Loctite or Coroseal rust converter, and Eastwood's Rust Encapsulator.
     
  20. Jan 28, 2025 at 6:58 AM
    #20
    shifty`

    shifty` I'm having daydreams about night things

    Joined:
    Jun 20, 2020
    Member:
    #48239
    Messages:
    28,408
    ATL
    Vehicle:
    '06 AC Limited V8/4WD
    (see signature for truck info)
    Worth noting, they only work half worth a shit if you get ALL the flaky rust out of there and get remotely down to clean, non-flaking metal.
     
  21. Jan 28, 2025 at 9:16 AM
    #21
    badass03taco

    badass03taco New Member

    Joined:
    Mar 8, 2024
    Member:
    #113307
    Messages:
    425
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Adam
    Vehicle:
    2005 Limited Double Cab 4wd
    I like the stuff called Qurox
    I did some metal ibeams about 5 years ago and they are still nice and black and have stopped any rust from coming thru again
    I did some areas on my dumpster where the dumpster truck driver has hit the dumpster a few times with the forks about a year ago, still black.
    I did some big metal beams on my shop, then used primer and paint and it turned out slick as glass.
    There are other chemical rust converters available, i think i got some from TheRustStore once, their rust converter to compare it to the Qurox, and while what it did was the same, it wasnt near as thick and took 2-3 coats where as the Qurox was practically completely done in one coat.
    I took a 4" ibeam i bought about 20 years ago for a project that didnt pan out, and repurposed them in another project back in 2020. They had sat outside for 15+ years and were as rusty as you can imagine steel beams would be sitting out in the southern mississippi weather. I didnt sand them, blast them, or brush them, i washed them off (some parts had dirt and pollen ect) and after they dried i used the Qurox with a cheap sisal brush and just painted the stuff on the ibeam. I let it sit overnight and put a second coat on the next day and it turns the rusted metal into a solid thick black coating. The rust converter turns into a soybean based oil coating which encapsulates the steel and keeps water out. I used the ibeam as a support for a wood floor over a span in a non air conditioned shop. Our humidity is high and steel rusts inside unless its air conditioned well, but these beams are still nice and slick and black. Here is a data sheet of the Qurox, i would venture to say its about 2x thicker than TheRustStore rust converter and you can easily do its job in less coatings.
     

    Attached Files:

    DBombs[QUOTED][OP] likes this.
  22. Jan 28, 2025 at 3:29 PM
    #22
    DBombs

    DBombs [OP] I Like Old Trucks

    Joined:
    May 15, 2022
    Member:
    #78413
    Messages:
    107
    Gender:
    Male
    NE Atlanta
    Vehicle:
    2006 Tundra DC SR5 V8 4x4 TRD
    Thank you. I’ve looked at a lot of them for a variety of uses not relating to this truck. I’ll check it out
     

Products Discussed in

To Top