Yesterday we worked on making the driveshaft fit. I modified the carrier bearing crossmember to fit the driveshaft throughout the range of travel. Since the AAM 10.5 has an offset diff, I had to widen the hole to the passenger side as well as allow for further down travel.
With the driveshaft sorted out, we moved on to finishing up some electrical changes and putting the cab back together. After a bit of power steering bleeding, we took it for a test drive. I had pretty low expectations, but it drove and handled pretty good for just having an eyeball alignment. The brakes however, were lacking.
I'm going to try some more bleeding today, but I think I'm going to have to make a major change to the brakes. The rear callipers are massive two piston calipers and the fronts are single. The Silverado had a 37mm bore master (1.46") and I have a 1" bore now. If I close the rear brake valve, my pedal is nice and solid, but with it open it goes to the floor. I also think I may be over-ranging the master cylinder as it gets about 1" from the floor, then clunks down to the floor. I may have to drill another hole in the brake pedal.
I'm not sure where to go at this point. We're going to try to bleed it some more, but I don't think that's going to fix anything. Ideally I could adapt a smaller rear caliper, or even better a much larger front caliper with a bigger master cylinder. I'm a bit stuck now until we can figure this out.