Yep, as goofy and "Rube Goldberg" as those PVHubs are, it's usually either the lower portions of the vacuum hoses (because they're exposed to all the sand/salt/water/road grime) that partially disintegrate, and/or, less often, the very thin O-rings associated with the major hub assembly no longer seal. You can jack the front wheels off the ground, alone or together, and (if it's just the hoses) check individual PVH function with a handheld vac pump.
In the Tech Library section are excellent how-to's on removing the outer "screen-disk" cover of the PVH mechanism; this allows you to both observe vacuum collapsing the rubber dome/seal, and to manually push on that same dome to engage/dis-engage the locking mechanism. So, no need to get manual hubs, since a) you can operate the stock PVH jobbies manually; and b) the after-market manual hubs are pricey and easy to steal. The stock PVHs are actually quite strong, with lots of metal-to-metal engagement.
PS: if your 1998 still has the original shift motor--in Maine of all environs--you're beating the odds! I hangs low, is not well sealed, and that funky round printed-circuit board tends to corrode to ruin.