I do not. I need to know where to look.It has already been moved to the build threads.
Do you know what gears you have?
Martin
I do not. I need to know where to look.It has already been moved to the build threads.
Do you know what gears you have?
Martin
What is that? SPID? Sorry that acronym has not floated across my vegetable soup yet.Is the SPID in the glovebox?
You should probably change the gear oil in the axles, so you can check it when you pull the inspection cover.
Martin
I think I have seen this. I will go dig through boxes of parts tomorrow and see if I can find it.Service Parts Identification (SPID) label, its either on your inner fender well or in the clove box, printed white and blue paper with all your PRO codes. Looks like attached image
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Corp 10 bolt or truck 12 bolt . No dana 44 used in rear factory on our trucks .Is the rear D44 or 10-bolt?
You are right, of course. IIRC, a disc conversion would be the same on either of those axles.Corp 10 bolt or truck 12 bolt . No dana 44 used in rear factory on our trucks .
I have 12 bolt rear end. Did a lot a searching and found rear conversion with parking brake, rotors, cables, calipers, straight bolt on for $450 and yes they tell you to replace MC and booster, and remove drum backer plates, but that is easy enough since its on a stand and the MC/booster is all in a box on the shelf anyway. lolSince a '78 should have come with front disc brakes, I'll assume you're talking about the rear axle. You'll find that most of the kits on the market are for cars, with 5-lug rotors. Keep in mind that swapping to rear disc comes with a host of other changes, like a different master cylinder and some new form of parking brake. Many would recommend just swapping to a later-model axle with drum-in-hat parking brake. I don't know if anybody has successfully grafted those brakes onto an older axle, but that would be cool.
Rustic Brakes took over TSM and they are still offering kits: https://www.rusticdiscbrakes.com/pr...suburban-blazer-thru-1991-rear-disc-brake-kit. It looks like the Eldorado caliper - search for people's experience with those...
Is the rear D44 or 10-bolt?
The most common for those years was 3.42:1 ratio gears so you are on target with your guessI have 12 bolt rear end. Did a lot a searching and found rear conversion with parking brake, rotors, cables, calipers, straight bolt on for $450 and yes they tell you to replace MC and booster, and remove drum backer plates, but that is easy enough since its on a stand and the MC/booster is all in a box on the shelf anyway. lol
I think it is a 344 gear in the axle??
Either springs rebuilt w energy suspension bushings and new hardware. As soon as bolts come in Friday I will install rear end. Should be in paint and ready to go by then.
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From the factory, the bolt and spacer goes on top of the frame flange. Nut and washer on the bottom. This would be less likely to hang up on something off-road. functionally, it doesn't matter. The purpose of the spacer is so the bolt is long enough to act like a small spring when the frame flexes so you don't pop the heads off. I have had a lot of these without lock washers, but the split lock washer really doesn't work the way you would think. If you want a locking feature, new distorted thread lock nuts would be the way to go.I believe this is in correct because it came out this way but looking online I see other variations on where the sleeve is located. Also there were no lock washers????
Unfortunately this one is not listing your gear ratio.Found it… last box of parts I opened. Does this tell a story about rear end gearing?
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Service Parts Identification (SPID) label, its either on your inner fender well or in the clove box, printed white and blue paper with all your PRO codes. Looks like attached image
View attachment 523554