Minimal lift, with a similar amount of travel - 13”-14”. It will probably 5” of bump.
David
"Minimal lift" sounds a lot shorter than the truck we've come to know...

Minimal lift, with a similar amount of travel - 13”-14”. It will probably 5” of bump.
David

Pretty sure the diesel uses the small block one.Did you guys use the big block or small block ord cross member?
It’s probably going to be similar in height to the K30 convertible, so ~2” lower than it is now. At least, that’s what I’m targeting. We’ll see what hits and fits."Minimal lift" sounds a lot shorter than the truck we've come to know...
Yeah 3/8” basically.I’ve got the same crossmember as you, so that’s probably where I’ll land. What is that gap? 3/8”ish?
David
I see two tubes and bunch of boxes.Quite the pile of parts.

Yessir. As Stephen and I discussed, pushing shocks through the floor, is a large sentence. The truck needs to maintain its multi-tool utility, and that means maintaining the interior cargo area in its current form. All that, and the next big upgrade I do to this truck, will be to build a new truck.
David
Kings and ORIs? Might as well.Wrong house..... I'll call Fed-Ex today and let them know.
My credit card statement disagrees.Sounds like you need to build a cantilever setup for the rear. Should be plenty of room under a suburban to run the coilovers horizontal.
Most of my interpretation will come from wrapping the engine cage around my 6.2. I see a few notable conflicts: the turbo, the downpipe, the crossover pipe, most of my exhaust after the downpipe, the intake charge pipe, the PSC remote reservoir, and the radiator return hose. I think that's about it.Can't wait to see you put your spin on the ORD coil over/link setup. Awesome.

I sometimes wish things would come apart as easily as you put them togetherI often wish things went back together as quick and easy as they come apart.![]()
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Fighting rust/crude/general greasyness.I sometimes wish things would come apart as easily as you put them together
A thought did enter my mind in response to the question, how do kingpins work?Fighting rust/crude/general greasyness.
Much nicer with new parts and hardware.
Not sure if you have the bolts yet for the caliper but they are H839. I got mine straight from Dodge dealer. The torq bracket isn’t as thick as the stock Ram, so I had to trim the bolt length down a 1/4” or so, as to not hit the rotor.I enjoy steady, methodical progress. That’s going to be a continued theme.
I got my fixture table setup as my axle workstation. A quick zip of the 3-3/8 hole saw and some table clamps is all it takes.
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I haven’t taken this axle down since I built it in 2005, so this was a good chance to cleanup and get it ready for the next 15 years.
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The performance and wear check on these bushings was good. Normally, these are dead nylon soldiers. Not today.
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Stripped, cleaned, and ready for some plasma.
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What used to take me hours when I was a dumb kid, now takes about 10 minutes.
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I should have ordered the offset nozzle so I wouldn’t have to grind as much.
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Organized and ready for inspection/reassembly.
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Next up: cleaning the tubes, pressing out the old studs, turning down the hubs, test fitting the link brackets, and sketching a truss.
David
