Washing The Undercarriage

WooD

WooD
Read mass posts of people power washing, putting a lawn sprinkler under them, and driving thru car washes.

Back around 2004 I made a bubba undercarriage washer for a Dodge truck I drove on the beach almost every day. Then used it on my Jeep up till I bought my Tacoma.

I made it out of some old PVC pipe and fittings I had laying around. Last month the hose fitting finally broke off. I figured it was time for a couple upgrades.

Added a water cut off valve, quick detach, and a 90 degree elbow so it would be more comfortable to use. It was also but ugly so I sprayed it down with a can of blue paint I had on a shelf. Still ugly, but works better than anything I've seen, and has been going strong for 15 years.

I was gonna trash it and make a new one out of 3/4" schedule 80 PVC pipe, but it kinda has sentimental values now.

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Since the Tacoma bed is plastic instead of metal is just hosing off the exhaust system from road salt would that be the only thing that will rust out quickly?
 
Since the Tacoma bed is plastic instead of metal is just hosing off the exhaust system from road salt would that be the only thing that will rust out quickly?

Frame, body, mounts, bolts.......

Great multitudes that could rust. Not sure which gen it was, but a lot of Tacoma frames had to be replaced due to rust.
 
Did Toyota rectify the Tacoma rust issues ??? If so, what have they done to prevent future frame damage. What year did they implement a fix to the issue? Thanks
 
I think a go pro camera WooD probably give better results.

It works perfect the way it is. The old style nozzle can be adjusted for any spray pattern you want.

The water shut off valve is the best upgrade I've done to it. Will keep me a lot dryer.

How is the paint bonding to the plastic pipe? Usually it won't hold unless the plastic is flamed.
 
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