no the drive shafts are different as the transmissions are,its a no go.
It'll bolt up to the engine, but the problem is that you'll either have to fabricate a cover for the rear of the engine and an adapter to mate the output shaft to the driveshaft. The difference between a 4x4 transmission and a 4x2 transmission is that the 4x4 transmission was designed to bolt up to a transfer case, not directly to the driveshaft.
on the rear of the transmission it has a single bolt holding it in, and usually has a + symbol on it.
A 4x2 vehicle has 4 wheels with the 2 rear wheels that drive. A 4x4 vehicle has 4 wheels with all 4 wheels that drive.
Front or rear?? 4x4 or 4x2??
yes as long as its the 6 cylinder and boh have to be either 4x4 or 4x2. can mix and match the two types of drive trains. only the valve body within the tranny itself can be swapped between 4x4 and 4x2.
No, there is no place on the back of the transmission to bolt it to.No, there is no place on the back of the transmission to bolt it to.
http://www.rimzoneonline.com/truckboltpattern.htm
information is given in drivetrain and inches Regular cab 4x2=75.8, 4x4=76.2 Double Cab 4x2=75.8, 4x4=76.2 Crewmax 4x2=75.6, 4x4=76.0
( 26.0 gallons ) - 4X2 with standard suspension ( 30.0 gallons ) - 4X4 and 4X2 with rear load level suspension according to the owners manual
4x2 , standard suspension ( 26 U.S. gallons ) 4x2 , rear air suspension ( 30 gallons ) 4x4 ( 30 gallons )
Yes, you can get a 4 cylinder 4x4 Nissan Frontier. This is actually the base engine for this vehicle which also offers five style packages and a 4x2 option as well.
8 because 4x2 is 8 and 4x4 is sixteen so if you subtract 8 from sixteen you get 8