Well, he
did say "ultimate", so I let my fantasy play out... Who knows? Maybe one day I'll luck into a boneyard chassis, or even a complete parts truck and I can do both the Cummins/Chevy conversion on my K-30 that I wish for
and play with leafspringing a 2nd gen...
As a practical matter for now, and what I'm gathering the parts to do once winter is done, is what JOdell suggested if it is what CumminsPower98 did to his.
Start here with this link to his webpages:
My Ram
and reference his replacing the steering setup on his '96 front axle with the improved design available on the '98. Follow through to his clever way of greasing the unitized hub bearings, while checking out all his other mods along the way.
I like his webpage and upgrades very much. (Thanks again, Mark!!) I also just came up with a set of adjustable, tubular, poly-bushed, upper and lower control arms for my truck. Very nice to have in the event I wish to lift my truck, not to mention much stronger than the factory sheetmetal stampings.
Follow that with what Pete said about religious maintenence, and it should help. Once you do all the upgrades, it will likely be a pretty solid system.
If money is not an object, Dynatrac's hub/lockout/axle shaft upgrade kit will get you a killer front axle except you will always be stuck with ball joints instead of kingpins. But good balljoints will give decent service time and will likely be the only serious replacement maintenence the frontend then requires.
There are a couple of cheaper front hub/bearing/outer shaft/lockout conversions on the market; and one also offers a 1-piece replacement inner shaft for the passenger side (at a higher price) like Dynatrac does (at a much higher price, of course). Their basic kits are half the price of the Dynatrac kit. But if you compare the beef of what Dynatrac supplies vs. their's you'll see why (sort of anyway). Dynatrac is not known for low prices to begin with, but they do build tough stuff, and in this case it is
much beefier... but c'mon,
twice as much?!! You'd have to
really need it (big power mods) to be worth paying that much, I think.
All in all, figure about $400 for the steering tierods and balljoint replacement parts. $300 to $400 to upgrade the trackbar. $250 for the steering brace. $300 to $400 for adjustable control arms. Don't forget your swaybar linkage, about, what, $75? Add good shocks and stabilizer for another $75 to $125 apiece. The bushing kit if your steering column is sloppy: $50. New front tires since your old ones are undoubtedly shot from the stock suspension: $300 to $400.
You will have fixed the major problems with the steering, now. $1500 won't do it even figured on the low side and without 2 new front tires. $2000 is probably closer to the mark. You have not upgraded your coil springs. You have not upgraded your axle yet, either. For that, you will spend another $1500 to $2500 for the lockout hub/bearing/outer shaft upgrade kit and separately sold inner axle shafts, depending on who's you buy.
Now this pricing is based both on what I have spent on some of those components so far, and what I have read, been quoted, or think I remember for the rest. But for only $3000 to $4500, you can have an "ultimate" 2nd gen coil spring front suspension that is way better than stock. But "ultimate" is pretty subjective. So is "only"...
If I told you what a comparable rebuild and custom softride suspension cost (
with springs!) for a Dana 60 leafspring frontend, you would either get angry or sick...