I'm going to be doing the Dodge 208 fix yoke swap on my K5 shortly. I'll document as good as I can incase you go that route. I found a Dodge 208 locally for $100, so it seemed like a good route to go to get a fix yoke on my 208.That’s probably something I’ll do after a while. Right now I just want to drive it![]()
.I'm going to be doing the Dodge 208 fix yoke swap on my K5 shortly. I'll document as good as I can incase you go that route. I found a Dodge 208 locally for $100, so it seemed like a good route to go to get a fix yoke on my 208.






So what heads are those? Aluminum heads aren't super prone to cracking, even freezing the block usually gets the freeze plugs first
But head gasket...
I bet the contents of the pan look just as stellar as the valve cover
money on the head gasket...
From what I’m reading online though is that trick flow has major problems with their heads cracking. There is coolant on both passenger and driver valve train.....more so on the passenger side. If the pan has coolant I am then worried that I ran it about 5 miles home and may have damaged the rotating assembly. Which steers me into just buying a built motor and rebuilding this one slowly over time.
My .02 (not necessary right)
With aluminum heads, the head gasket selection is very critical. You may have had more than one issue, and if it was heating, it may have already been an issue.
I’d skip the diesel and prime it on regular engine oil while turning it periodically