Yeah, a lot of shops are reluctant because it can get expensive and it’s time consuming. That said, these trucks really are not all that hard to work on. Most of my mechanical knowledge has come from working on them and being on here. My choptop started as a 2wd with a blown up 2.9. Previous owner, who was also a member on here (Farva aka Sherrodwannabeb2) managed to crack the head over the #1 cylinder so bad a fingernail fit in the crack, which sprayed hot oil on the hot exhaust and melted the wiring harness above it. At that point I could do brakes and oil and not a whole lot of other knowledge. I replaced the cracked head and converted it to 4x4 with the help of a couple forum members (
@ZMan , CombsCustoms and another). Ended up cracking the other head, replaced that, then cracked both. There was a mystery coolant leak that was a contributing factor and I suspect an issue with the block after talking with
@PetroleumJunkie412
At that point I put a junkyard 2.9 in, the truck had been wrecked into a pine tree and it pushed the bumper nearly to the front of the motor, so I knew it had run good, lol. And it did run good, but when I last re-did the suspension and went to 35” tires, the 2.9 didn’t have enough oomph, it would pull hard until 4th gear then fall flat on its face. So, a 4.0 that was in a truck we scrapped went in. I was getting pretty good at all of this at that point. Actually had to pull that motor (my screw up) and swap in a junkyard 4.0 and did it in a day, including new head and intake gaskets on the junkyard motor. If you’re willing to learn and do the work, the sky is the limit with these.