- Joined
- Oct 10, 2024
- Messages
- 22
- Points
- 101
- City
- Austin, Tx
- State - Country
- TX - USA
- Vehicle Year
- 2004
- Vehicle
- Ford Ranger
- Drive
- 2WD
- Engine
- 4.0 V6
- Transmission
- Automatic
Little update for everyone: after my battle with the new coolant reservoir (the amazon replacement didnt come with the proper o-ring (I-ring? It was round but flat and tough to track down - that's all I know) and a bad sensor - replaced that and my temps are back to normal), I slowed down on the upgrades.
I spent some time sound-deadening the doors (100% recommend) and replacing the speakers, but have yet to re-do the headliner. Also still need to cut some foam out of the drivers seat because this thing is a bit short for me.
New wheels and tires have been awesome for traction over the cheap-o tires she came with (esp in the wet), but had to lose the hub covers b/c they were wildly uncomfortable lug-centric. Hub-spacers have pretty much fixed the ride. Still need to find some new front hub dust covers and paint the hub-rings.
Added a 2" lift in the front and 1" in the rear to help with some rubbing. Before/after pics from the lift included.
This leads me to a question for the audience: what do I do with the rear diff? I think I want to move to 4.10 gears in the rear to get some of the pep back from the larger tires, but while I have it in the shop, I'm considering an LSD or even air-lockers. I have no illusions about making a RWD truck a serious offroader, but I have more west-texas driving in my future and want a little more capability here. LSD would obviously help more day-to-day, but probably not compare on trails or in serious weather.
I spent some time sound-deadening the doors (100% recommend) and replacing the speakers, but have yet to re-do the headliner. Also still need to cut some foam out of the drivers seat because this thing is a bit short for me.
New wheels and tires have been awesome for traction over the cheap-o tires she came with (esp in the wet), but had to lose the hub covers b/c they were wildly uncomfortable lug-centric. Hub-spacers have pretty much fixed the ride. Still need to find some new front hub dust covers and paint the hub-rings.
Added a 2" lift in the front and 1" in the rear to help with some rubbing. Before/after pics from the lift included.
This leads me to a question for the audience: what do I do with the rear diff? I think I want to move to 4.10 gears in the rear to get some of the pep back from the larger tires, but while I have it in the shop, I'm considering an LSD or even air-lockers. I have no illusions about making a RWD truck a serious offroader, but I have more west-texas driving in my future and want a little more capability here. LSD would obviously help more day-to-day, but probably not compare on trails or in serious weather.

