nadsab
Well-Known Member
Hi There,
I have to say I just discovered this forum whilst doing my brakes on my ranger, it seems to be a terrific resource.
I own a 97 Ranger 2.3 liter short bed stepside, and I am wondering, for a guy who is a simple back yard mechanic and only does stuff like maintain his own brakes, oil changes, etc, how difficult is it to replace the standard rear shocks with new standard shocks in my baby? What tools would I need?
Would the cost of additional tools bring it up to the same cost as having shocks professionally installed?
I don't mind spending an entire weekend doing it, just wondering about how much of a pain it is to do and if I would need specialized tools, would I have to compress the leaf springs, etc...
I remember getting a quote a few years ago, seems to me it was somewhere around 300 to 400 bucks for reasr shock replacement including parts.
I don't plan on doing any fancy conversions or lifting up the truck, jsut factory equipment that's all.
Thanks anyone.
I have to say I just discovered this forum whilst doing my brakes on my ranger, it seems to be a terrific resource.
I own a 97 Ranger 2.3 liter short bed stepside, and I am wondering, for a guy who is a simple back yard mechanic and only does stuff like maintain his own brakes, oil changes, etc, how difficult is it to replace the standard rear shocks with new standard shocks in my baby? What tools would I need?
Would the cost of additional tools bring it up to the same cost as having shocks professionally installed?
I don't mind spending an entire weekend doing it, just wondering about how much of a pain it is to do and if I would need specialized tools, would I have to compress the leaf springs, etc...
I remember getting a quote a few years ago, seems to me it was somewhere around 300 to 400 bucks for reasr shock replacement including parts.
I don't plan on doing any fancy conversions or lifting up the truck, jsut factory equipment that's all.
Thanks anyone.
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