The OP's Explorer have 6" of lift and 33's... Still, it would be more beneficial to attempt to fix the bumpsteer by correctly aligning the tie rods (I know it wont be perfect) than to hide it with a steering sabilizer...
They should both be 1350's so the manual one should bolt right up, there should be a floor plate that you replace that includes the hole for the tcase shifter, so you don't have to cut a hole in the floor...
The Rubicon axles aren't real D44's until you get into the JK axles... They have a D44 sized ring gear, but everything else is D30 size, it's basically a D30 with D44 ring and pinion...
It is physically impossible to have a "bigger" spark by just changing spark plugs... As long as they are gapped the same the spark will be the same relative size... It would take an upgrade to the entire ignition system to create a bigger spark... Plus, having more spark won't even do anything...
Might as well think of a different idea if you want 'reliable'... Those selector valves you are trying to use are not rated for the pressure of your EFI system... Remember, they only came on carb'ed trucks... Now, the full size trucks had dual tanks... AND EFI... Search for it, I've asked...
I've heard the 2wd BII's are the ones that are prone to roll overs... Having said that, I've driven both 4wd and 2wd BII's, and I've never had any problem with either... As long as you don't take a corner like a racecar you're fine... My Explorer Sport does seem a little more stable than my...
Yes... Though the internals in the later transmissions and specifically the 4.0L are a little different to help handle the 4.0L low end torque... The beefed up A4LD behind the 4.0L is still notorious for leaving before it's done it's proper service life, and one from behind a 2.9 will only be...
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