Probably gonna be all picky and sand it with a flapper wheel- then go the extra step and use sand paper and hand sand it linear (in Line with the fin instead of against it) to keep micro cracks from forming too I suppose…
But quite but, in true family tradition, my oldest granddaughter was miffed at me when I took away the brake cleaner she was using to remove dirt and such from the pumpkin.
I thought you said that you had the lift installed?
Now interference from a 6.2 pan, vs a 6.5 pan. Remind me why a 6.2 was used in this truck?
Ok, I’m killing time before going up to SLC for an appointment at the VA…Long story recap follows.
Issues: Other than wear and tear. I’ve had two big issues that have taken a long time to sort out. Biggest one, the bad valves not caught during the rebuild and the topic of this thread…the suspension with the half-shaft/differential being the main problem. To be honest, until recently when I followed up on a suggestion about shaft angles, missing bump stops (thank you BigT) etc, and did a lot more research, nobody has been able to figure out the breaking half-shaft issue was stemming entirely from the Rough Country Kit’s front differential drop kit not being fully removed and things restored to OEM in 2013.
The Certainly not me, initially. When I bought it, I didn’t know the differences between 1500, 2500, and 3500 trucks were not in physical size, rather, capability etc.. Hell, I bought the truck to ‘learn about diesels’ and got the K1500 because I ‘didn’t want a big truck.’ Too funny. Anyway, to continue the rehash of the ‘nobody can figure it out’ list who have had eyes and hands on the front end and didn’t notice or mention the differential being lowered…
Not the various alignment shops and suspension “specialists” between 2007 and 2010 who couldn’t get it to stop pulling right. Then one here in 2010, “shade tree” mechanics pointed out my alignment challenges to date stemmed from the right front having been smacked into something unyielding, slightly bending suspension bracing (the previous owners, construction guys, who’d apparently bashed it out of square. They got things to where it would could be adjusted to not pull.
Not the mechanic shop that first pointed out the broken upper front differential mount 12 years ago after the first break.
Not the Transmission shop that supplied the first replacement differential, which I put in only to discover their supplier sourced me a 4:10 vs. 3:73. The shop made things right and did the re-swap themselves. They never said anything about it being suspended by drop brackets.
Not the body shop that did the frame work I’d requested to ensure everything was still square up front (no surprise, it wasn’t).
So, yeah, been thrashing and trashing on this issue and I appreciate the suggestions from the group. It ain’t easy when you have to go off written descriptions, bad angle pictures etc. and can’t get under there to see things.
BigT, you’re the only one besides me to have actually looked under the truck trying to help figure it out.
14 @#$%^& years….
Lift: Yes, but, I had it installed because I certainly didn’t have the knowledge or the expertise to do it myself. 2008 about a year after I bought the truck, If I knew then what I learned couple of years later I’d have either gone with the BDS 6” full suspension lift or left things alone…yeah, BDS.
Engine swap to earlier 6.2: Knowing the past abuse the truck was subjected to before I bought it and having had some overheating issues before upgrading the cooling system, I correctly guessed my motor wasn’t long for the earth. When Ted’s (former member 635) ‘ultimate build’ 6.2 motor failed, I bought the block the warrantied pieces and purchased the rest of what was needed splitting the $$ with 635. When the original guy contracted and paid to rebuild it proved unreliable, Bill Heath jumped in during a time of great stress, and put the engine together. Unfortunately, he missed the fact that the valves were CKO but, he made it right with a set of P400 heads off of his spare engine (separate thread, long story). My original engine, a 6.5 141 series block was torn down and it was discovered that the piston walls were showing wear and the heads had large cracks between the valves from overheating. Dodged a bullet, sorta. Probably would have been better to breakdown with great carnage and bought an Optimizer….