It's been a while since I have done anything notable to Ruby. Well that has changed, although they are not huge changes. I have had a little overtime cash and some really cold and snowy days off with a small (heated) one car garage calling my name. We have had over 4' of snow in the last week so it was a perfect time to take a break from work and shoveling and spend some time working on my backcountry motorhome. I have been collecting parts for a while now and figured it was a good time to get some work done.
I had the Old Man Emu medium springs on the rear for over a year now and with the weight of the Wildernest camper they sat about level or maybe shy of 1" over stock. I have had a 1 1/2" 4crawler BJ spacer lift and 1" diff drop in my garage for over a year now. I decided that it was time to order an Old Man Emu add a leaf and make my springs the "heavy" model. I installed it and the rear sat where I wanted it with about 1 1/2" of lift.
Now it was time to get the front lift installed to level it out. So, on went the bj spacers and diff drop, along with new KYB Monomax shocks and new Moog upper ball joints. I also needed new rims because the backspacing on mine were 5". I think the bj spacers require a maximum of 4 3/4" backspacing to work. I found this out the hard way by installing everything and realizing that the tires hit the upper A-arms. I had to pull the spacers back off until my rims showed up and then do it all over again.
However, this gave me an excuse to get rid of the crappy old chrome rims and put on a set of cheap black modular rims from Summit Racing. Another plus is that for $50 each they are also rated to carry 600lbs more per rim than the old rims. I also have a new pitman arm and idler arm with bronze bushings and a Blazeland idler arm brace ready to go on but that may have to wait a bit as it is a bit frustrating working in such a small garage.
My garage's interior dimensions are about 11' wide by 19' deep and in order for my truck to fit I need to take off my tire carrier in order to have about 1 1/2' of working space in front of the truck. I would like to encourage everyone that has a garage or a warm driveway to work in, to work on their own trucks as much as they can. You get to learn about how your truck works and maybe gain some confidence to fix it if it breaks while out in the middle of nowhere. Almost everything that I have done to my truck other than tire mounting and welding my sliders on has been done in in this small little garage.
So, as I have stated before, I am a bit computer challenged and I don't know how to post pictures individually with captions. The following pictures include pictures of my small garage, my front end parts, and a before and after lift shots. The before shot is the one with chrome rims on the truck with the rear add-a-leaf installed. The picture with the black rims is with the lift fully installed and the alignment done and ready to drive.




