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well what was a pain for me, was you have to grind off 4 rivets holding the drop bracket on the engine crossmember. we got one side mostly off the rivets, then our grinder broke. so we had to spend a while drilling all the way through the rivets.
and when putting it back in, the 2 sides of the axles had spread apart alittle- the easiest fix for that was to strap a come-along to each side and just winch the sides together.
biggest advice though, is make sure you have AT LEAST one helper, but 2 was ideal for me, cosidering we didnt have a hoist nor all the ideal tools.
5 Years ago, I started my lift after work at 5pm and drove it home drove it home by 11:30pm. It still needed an alignment, but it was all together. With the right tools, and a hoist...its pretty simple actually.
Do you mean the(2) TTB frame parts moved apart? Assuming once you removed the axle pivot bolts?
Koty,
Did you wind up using the sway bar on the front? If so did your lift come with the Sway bar bushing extensions?
No, havent done it yet but spent some time eyeballing and pondering under my truck and the sway bar issue occurred to me...
What if you got some 4" extruded steel tubing pieces and used them (Or one long extruded tube) in place of expensive extensions... hmmmm...my creative juices are flowin' !
TTB lifts are easy. The first time I did it was in my driveway with minimal tools and I had never touched an axle before, let alone installed a lift.