Novak Conversions Jeep Wrangler TJ engine mounts

It just happened!

Did you disassemble the unit bearings to change the studs? I’m curious how they work. Specifically, what type of bearings are in there? Conical rollers, flat rollers, ball? I know the stub shaft and nut are needed to keep them together, but unsure if the nut torque provides pre-load (e.g. conical) or just holds the bearings and the shaft in there.

I removed the hub bearing, but didn't need to disassemble it.
 
Could you tell what kind of bearing it is?

Did you see this conversation?

Post in thread 'Can I temporarily turn my 99 TJ into a 2WD convertible?'
 
Did you see this conversation?

Post in thread 'Can I temporarily turn my 99 TJ into a 2WD convertible?'

I did not. Thank you. That is exactly what I was looking for. You can see why the bearing would walk apart without the stub shaft and nut. And you can see that the nut torque on the stub shaft does not pre-load the bearing.
 
Coolers are in the grill. Now I just need to put everything back together. The lower passenger side fitting that goes into the transmission cooler is the one Blaine uses. It makes the hose routing on that side much better!

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As I peruse the Moab wheeling, I installed the grill, installed a new power steering pressure hose, and reconnected everything. Since the headlight harness was out, that gave me the opportunity to re-tape it and clean up the front-end wiring. All that' left is to run the cooler lines and put the front bumper back on. Next on the list is to get the Rubi Crawler and 241 case in, then do the savvy UA.

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Routing is as follows:

- Transmission hot side, lower transmission line, to right side of radiator
- Radiator, left side, to lower right side of Setrab cooler
- Upper, left side, Setrab cooler to transmission cold return (top transmission line).
 
I need to get a small write up on what was learned from the Derale 13250 power steering cooler and the Setrab SLM420-14 transmission cooler install. This setup is as good as it gets and outside maybe tweaking the hose routing slightly, I'd not change a thing.

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I need to finish up the winch wiring but have a 1st world problem. I rebuilt a Warn XD 9000 but have a new Warn XP9.5 I could install.
 
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I need to get a small write up on what was learned from the Derale 13250 power steering cooler and the Setrab SLM420-14 transmission cooler install. This setup is as good as it gets and outside maybe tweaking the hose routing slightly, I'd not change a thing.

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I need to finish up the winch wiring but have a 1st world problem. I rebuilt a Warn XD 9000 but have a new Warn XP9.5 I could install.

You do know your sloppy install will mean you just end up with leaks, worn via rubbed hoses, and likely overheated fluid down the road....


;) Very sharp and clean install! Looking great!
 
Those of you that are paying attention here, I'll let you determine where this goes. Over the last 12 months I've been looking at the options for a replacement radiator, given the Mopar version is discontinued.

Below is a quick market snapshot of the most dependable 2003 TJ radiators now in RockAuto’s catalog (plus a few heavy-duty all-aluminum choices). These observations are based on multiple installs.
CSF 3244 OE‑Style Radiator


OE‑Fit Favorite
CSF 3244 OE‑Style Radiator

$115.76
RV and Auto Parts

Denso 221‑9039 Radiator


OE Supplier
Denso 221‑9039 Radiator

$171.25
FR SPORT

CSF 2578 Copper 3‑Row


Heavy Duty
CSF 2578 Copper 3‑Row

$267.99
RadiatorNow + 9 others

Spectra Premium CU2101


Budget OEM
Spectra Premium CU2101

$197.04
FR SPORT

FVP / Generic 2‑Row


Lowest Cost
FVP / Generic 2‑Row

$88.99
RadiatorNow + 9 others

Mishimoto Performance Aluminum


Full Aluminum
Mishimoto Performance Aluminum

$434.87
JDTRacing.com

GPI Racing 3‑Row Aluminum


3‑Row Budget
GPI Racing 3‑Row Aluminum

$178.00
GPI Racing

Dynamic Perf. 2‑Row Aluminum


2‑Row Budget
Dynamic Perf. 2‑Row Aluminum

$118.99
Dynamic Performance Tuning + 1 others


How the major choices stack up​

TierWhy it’s a standoutWhen to choose it
Denso 221-9039Built by Jeep’s original supplier; spot-on fitment and tank crimp quality; long track record of leak-free service. Bob Is The Oil GuyYou want “as close to Mopar as possible” without paying NOS prices.
CSF 3244CSF’s OE-style unit uses slightly thicker tubes and extra reinforcement at the tank-core seam; TJ owners consistently report temps identical to the factory part. Wrangler TJ ForumIdeal daily-driver replacement with a bit more margin for slow trail work.
CSF 2578 Copper 3-RowAll-metal soldered core dissipates heat a bit faster at very low airflow and is easy to re-core locally years down the road.For heavy winching, crawling, or if you’ve already beefed up your charging system (it weighs ~6 lb more).
Spectra Premium CU2101Good fit, lifetime warranty, and readily available; plastic tanks use thicker gaskets than some budget brands. Bob Is The Oil GuySolid mid-price pick if you flush coolant regularly.
Value 2-Row (FVP/TYC/GPD)Lowest up-front cost, decent OE-type cooling, but more variable tank-crimp QC—inspect before installing.Strict budget builds or a quick flip.
Mishimoto / GPI / other full-aluminum unitsTIG-welded end tanks eliminate plastic seams; 2- to 3-row cores shrug off repeated heat-soak on long climbs.Extreme off-road/overlanding, or if you already run an electric fan with ample amperage. Do note thicker cores can inhibit airflow at highway speeds unless the


▶️ Koyorad OE-Replacement (part A2798 / W0133-1775799)​

Fitment1997-2006 Wrangler TJ (2.5 L & 4.0 L, auto & manual)
Core / tanksAluminum core, plastic tanks, down-flow (same layout as factory)
Oil coolerIntegrated 12-inch plate cooler (works with OEM quick-connect or flare adapters)
Typical RockAuto price*≈ $120–$140 (when in stock) RockAuto
Alternate sourcePartsGeek lists the identical unit at ≈ $205 Parts Geek
Why it’s lovedBuilt in ISO 9001 plants, tight fin density, and a reputation on TJ forums for “zero early failures.” Wrangler TJ Forum
*RockAuto SKU shows up under Cooling System → Radiator → KOYORAD A2798. Inventory comes and goes quickly, so hit the orange “notify when available” button if it’s greyed out.

Where Koyorad slots into the lineup​

Use caseBest pickWhy
Pure OEM reliability, plug-and-playDenso 221-9039 or Koyorad A2798Both are Tier-1 suppliers to Jeep; all plastic/aluminum just like Mopar but with stronger crimps.
Slow-speed rock-crawling / max coolingCSF 2578 heavy-duty copper 3-row30 % more coolant mass; tolerate mud-packed fins.
Budget daily driverSpectra Premium CU2101Decent fit, 1-row, ~ $95.
Full-aluminum performanceMishimoto MJ-Jeep-97-06Welded tanks, lifetime warranty; stiffer but pricier.
Bottom line:
If you want factory-level cooling and long life without shelling out for an all-aluminum unit, grab the Koyorad A2798 the next time you spot it in stock on RockAuto. It’s every bit as trustworthy as Denso and usually a few bucks cheaper.
Need torque-specs, coolant choices, or install tips when you pull the trigger? Just let me know.

Denso 221-9234 vs. Koyorad A2102
(Both are the OE-style plastic-tank/aluminum-core replacements that RockAuto carries for the 1997-2006 TJ/Wrangler)
Spec / FeatureDenso 221-9234Koyorad A2102
Core thickness0.63 in (16 mm) — classic single-row “5/8-inch” core Main Website1.31 in (33 mm) — oversized 1-row core that almost doubles coolant volume Parts Geek
Fin density13-14 fins / in (measured, not published) → OEM airflow load14-15 fins / in (similar count, but more surface area thanks to thicker tubes)
Integrated trans-oil coolerPlate-style, quick-connects match factory lines (auto-trans models)Plate-style, hose-barb OR quick-connect (varies by production run); still plug-and-play
Tank & crimp design6 mm glass-fiber–reinforced tanks; standard narrow crimp gasketSame tank material plus a wider neoprene gasket and heavier crimp fingers (less seep-over-time complaints on Jeep boards)
Weight (dry)≈ 17 lb≈ 22 lb (the extra aluminum is all in the core)
Warranty12 months / unlimited miles Denso ProductsLimited lifetime to original purchaser CARiD
Made inIndonesia or Taiwan, in DENSO’s ISO-14001 plantsIndonesia or China, in Koyorad’s ISO-9001 plants
Typical RockAuto price$115 – $145 (almost always in stock)$105 – $130 (often sells out—hit “Notify Me”)

Practical differences you’ll actually notice​

  1. Cooling head-room
    The Koyo’s 33 mm core holds ~0.3 qt more coolant and exposes ~40 % more metal to airflow. In slow off-road crawling—where fan airflow is your only airflow—that margin shows up as a slower climb off idle and quicker recovery once the electric fan kicks on. The Denso meets factory spec but can run 5-10 °F hotter in the same slog
  2. Long-term seep resistance
    Koyo moved to a wider tank gasket three generations ago; owner reports of “green crust at the crimps” after 3-4 winters are much rarer than with the current-run Denso (you’ll see plenty of 4- to 12-month seep stories on TJ forums).Wrangler TJ Forum
  3. Availability
    Denso wins here—RockAuto, Amazon, even local stores have them sitting on the shelf. Koyo inventories appear in waves; when you see “A2102 — In Stock,” order quickly or plan to wait a few weeks.

So—which one is “top”?​

If your priority is…PickRationale
Maximum cooling margin for rock-crawling, desert heat, or towing + “buy once, cry once” longevityKoyorad A2102Thicker core, beefier crimps, lifetime warranty outweigh the occasional stock hunt.
True factory spec, lowest hassle to source, mostly pavement milesDenso 221-9234Still a Tier-1 OE brand, usually arrives next-day, and cools just fine at road speeds.
Bottom line:
For a TJ that spends real time creeping over rocks or idling in summer traffic, the Koyo edges out the Denso thanks to sheer thermal capacity and a lifetime guarantee. If you need a radiator tomorrow and mainly commute or trail-ride in temperate weather, the Denso is an easy, reliable grab.
 
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So what does all this mean? Over the last several months I've installed more than a dozen radiators, covering multiple solutions. Of those, the Koyo rises to the top for an OEM replacement. Here are a few reasons why.

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Novak Conversions Jeep Wrangler TJ engine mounts