Not many go searching for the right speedometer gear to correct for cable driven speedos when gearing and tires sizes get changed on these trucks. More common to have an error for larger tires or gear ratio changes. 90-91 trucks it's pretty easy like mine. Crack open the DRAC module, do the math and look it up on the web for a specific number based on the tire and axle ratio numbers and change the jumpers accordingly. Pretty easy to do and really accurate if you are accurate with the tire size/diameter.
Totally agree. Add to that the deeper gear ratio negating any possible gains in fuel economy due to the consistently higher cruise rpm on flat ground. Not that building a squarebody is the direction to go for a decent fuel mileage off-road toy. But I've been on the other side of the coin too. My old 75 K5 had a well worn 350 with a Q-jet, 465 manual trans, 3.73 gears in 1/2 ton axles and 35" tires. Speedo was off due to the tires so it read slow. But I recorded a few tanks using GPS to track the actual miles. 8-9 mpg was the norm. That was a normally empty truck, not loaded for a weekend or a week's worth of off-road fun either. So I'm trying to strike a balance between having the power the truck needs to drive on the highway and mountain passes and getting halfway decent mileage. The 8.1 in my plans seems odd to think I'd get better mileage but comparing notes with Larry and his K10/camper weighing in 1500 to 2000 pounds more than mine with his running 4.56 gears and mine running 4.10's might get a tad better than his. He's seeing 11-12 now loaded which I'm pretty close to as is with the 5.3. But even if my mileage stays around the same number, I'll have the power to maintain a safe speed up grades without spinning the engine to 5,000 RPMs and higher. For me, having the power to keep up with traffic is the main goal, the possibility of incremental gains in economy is a bonus.
It's insane that I do. But I'm crazy that way. I like knowing. Then again if I was really stressing on needing tremendously better fuel economy I'd use a better vehicle that is just as capable, smaller and more fuel-efficient. I just like keeping track.
Nothing wrong with using what works. I felt that way with my old 75. The 91 came my way without an engine, I had the 5.3 from a customer and time to acquire the stuff to put them together. I can't say it was cheap though, even with a lot of horsetrading on some parts. It's not monumental enough to say the swap will pay for itself in fuel savings that's for sure. But better driveability, self adjustability for elevation and temperature and consistent easy starting have been worth it.