Im pretty sure im going to order this crossover set up this weekend. Is the stock tie rod going to be okay to use with crossover? Will I be needing to run a steering stabilizer still?
Note that if you change the tierod you'll need to realign the truck (well, set the toe, which can sorta be done yourself) and, if you're keeping the steering stab (see below) you'll need to set up mounting for it. Most of the aftermarket HD tierods are just round tube, so you'd need to get a mounting kit for the stabilizer.
Were it me, I would leave your existing tierod and stabilizer in place, do the crossover, and get that squared away first. You can do the beefy tie rod later and decide on the steering stab at that point. Heck, it's easy-peasy to remove the stab and test-drive it without, see whatcha think. See below, but while it's off, you should test push/pull your existing stab and if it doesn't move smoothly, move it smoothly into the trash.
Ive heard that steering stabilizers are there to cover up your problems is this true?
Yeeeeah mostly. Certainly the dual-stab setups are ... suspicious, and in my experience, as likely to cause problems as to fix them.
I had a worn-out steering stab that wouldn't collapse or extend evenly, it bound up over some of its travel as I pushed and pulled on it, so my steering improved with it off. I did replace it with a new one eventually.
The stabilizer is similar to a shock absorber, and is intended to absorb slight vibrations in the tierod and not transmit then to the steering, i.e. so you don't feel the wheel twitch, makes things a smidge smoother. It is not the end-all to human existence, does not feed the hungry nor bring peace to the Mideast.
-- A