chevycrew wrote:The diff drop could be done with some plate on each side of the oil pan, with a tube between for the shaft.
Pretty simple for just the diff drop. The lower a-arms, steering, and front D-line would be harder. Upper a-arms, chop off the upper bracket and bring the a-arm tight to the top of the frame. But for clearance it may to need to be widened to clear.
Plate and tube is what I was looking at for a diff bracket. Doing a custom bracket would allow for reinforcement of the mounting location near the pinion. For S10 guys, pinion walk was really bad on the aluminum cases, which is why they failed a lot. I think ours actually holds up better
because it's mounted to the oil pan.
The buckets are straight up and down enough that the upper arms will slide down nicely. Just need to reinforce the bucket where you want them.
For the lowers a piece needs to be made to relocate the two plates that have the knuckles on them. My thought was to build pieces out of plate with tube to reinforce the bolt holes, then just use longer bolts to go through it to the stock alignment bolt holes.
There apparently are two different sizes of front driveshafts. Code JRO is 23.625" long and HA1 is 26.75" long. I have HA1 and have lots of room to move the DS in and out on the CV. I've already had it down and it seems long enough to bring down 3-4" or so. Since we are making our own bracket, we can clock the diff to give a little better pinion angle. Also, since the diff NEVER moves, it actually makes the driveshaft issue pretty easy.
11 Silverado LTZ - 6.2L/6l80, 2/3 drop, self tuned
85 Hilux - 3RZ, dual cases, caged, 40s, chromo everything
02 TrailBlazer LTZ - 35s, lockers, balls - Gone but not forgotten -
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