Quote:
Interchange is easy to determine; plug in your truck's year and model into
www.car-part.com , search steering gear/box, w/o power, and the results will list all interchangeable years and models.
Don't think you've got but two options on that truck: Power or Manual.
I tried car-part.com and noticed it only listed trucks; I didn't know if that meant vans wouldn't interchange or that the only parts currently available were for trucks. Turned around and searched for a van after reading your post and it didn't cross-list anything, so I guess it's pickup only.
I'm going to be doing a front end rebuild here w/in the next year, and it would be during this rebuild process that I did the swap. I'm honestly not sure if it's the route I want to go. I know the manual box is a bit lighter (which is a definite plus), and I've also heard that manual boxes generally offer better road feel and overall performance. Of course, that info is all coming from people who are used to working with much lighter vehicles; personally I have absolutely zero seat time with a manual box. If all I can get is an ungodly slow ratio box, I'm not sure I'd be gaining a whole lot.
Ultimately, I'd like to turn this thing into a corner-carver (or as much as it could be), with a performance oriented suspension drop and front and rear sway bars. Again though, looking at rear sway bars most are listed as "towing upgrades," and I'm not sure if they would be overkill for increased handling with no load. It's only used as a truck about twice a year when I pack all my stuff into it to move to/away from college because of summer break. The rest of the time it's usually just used for commuting. It does occaisonally see an engine block or transmission thrown in the back of it, but realistically that's not a whole lot of weight.
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Used to own:
'82 Dodge D150
Erson 270 Cam, O/S valves, mild port work, ~9.5:1 compression
Currently fighting with an '85 VW Cabriolet
My other passion