I had been putting off doing some work to the truck because we were hunting. Now that we've scratched that itch it was time to scratch some things off the list.
First up was the rear leaf springs. The camper 400ish lbs, with another 200lbs of gear and 100lbs of extra fuel would drop the rear end a good 2". It also rode really soft in the rear. So I decided to rebuild my bastard pack and add another leaf.
Picked up 2 smaller thick leafs off a blazer for a grand total of $15.
Picked up all new pads as mine were badly worn/non existent. The leafs were previously squeaking pretty good when being flexed out hard.
New 6 spring pack.
I didn't take any before pictures.. Previously the back sat 1" lower then the front fully loaded. Now it sits dead level with the front and rides way better. I was really surprised to pick up 1" of lift with that little leaf. The goal was more to improve the ride, which it did drastically. No more squeaks anymore either, love that.
I grabbed my leaf spring pads and new keeper bolts off a local guy. I was stoked when I walked into the shop behind his house. This guy had everything, for very reasonable prices, cash only and talk about a great source of knowledge.
While I was grabbing the leaf I found the unicorn I've been trying to find for 5+ years now. A tach dash!
These are not common and quite rare, at least around here. I previously found one but it was in rough shape and a lot of the plastic tabs were broken so I returned it to the yard. This one is absolutely mint!
Side by side with the stock dash you can see the tach in place of the enormous fuel gauge. The fuel gauge is moved to the place of the seatbelt idiot light which was totally useless.
I switched over my speedo/odometer, gear selector indicator and some of the lights. I pulled all of the wiring off the truck for the tach and built a harness for it. Signal wire from the distributor, ign power wire and a ground and it's done and in the truck and working perfectly. The really nice thing is it came out of the same year truck so I didn't have to repin the harness for the cluster.
I had smelled gas the last few times I was working on the truck and just thought it was because I had overfilled the tank recently.
Took a better look this time only to be quite disappointed.
This is a 4 or 5 year old tank in perfect shape. I thought maybe a rock had gotten into the skid plate and rubbed through the tank, or maybe one of the straps.
After wiping it down you can see one of the 3 spot welds for the internal baffling has cracked and its weeping out of there. ************ job to have to do again. New tank on order. Sure don't make stuff like they used to.
Also replaced the idler arm for the 3rd or 4th time this year?
Went with a heavier duty AC Delco unit this time.
Tough to tell in the pics but the ball joints are much larger then the previous model I was using.
I was hoping to avoid doing this with the SAS coming up this spring hopefully. However it was needed.
Picked up 3 new BFG All terrains, I'll be using the brand new spare I bought previously as my 4th and swapping an old tire on to the spare.
I'm amazed how well these tires hold up. These have 20,000 km+ of backroads on them.