There are three ways to find a gear ratio.
1 A dealer can normally tell from the vin number.
2 There are normally tags or labels on the axle that have part number, gear ratio, and fluid requirement
info.
3 You can count how many times you have to turn the driveshaft to get one complete turn of the tires.
In the glove compartment, there'll be a sticker with a bunch of three digit codes. Those are RPO codes, and one of them tells you the gear ratio.
The stock gear ratio for a 1995 Chevy Blazer is 3.73. This provides a good balance of fuel economy and power to the rear wheels.
The gear ratio was whatever the customer ordered back then, you could get anything from a 2.76 ratio to a 4.10 rear gear.
depends upon the truck, diffrent ratio's were used
3.73 if you have a 350good engine and automatic transmission
Same as the rear.
Call a Chevy dealer and ask for parts dept. and give them the VIN# and ask them what the gear ratio is and they will tell you.
You'd have to look at the RPO code in the glove compartment to determine this, as there were a couple different options. The gear ratio for the front and rear axle will match.
I have a 2002 Blazer with the 4.3L engine and 3.73 differential gear ratio, it gives me 17 mpg on average.
Depends on the engine and transmission
That all depends on what engine is in it and the rear gear ratio.
There are three ways to find a gear ratio. 1 A dealer can normally tell from the vin number. 2 There are normally tags or labels on the axle that have part number, gear ratio, and fluid requirement info. 3 You can count how many times you have to turn the driveshaft to get one complete turn of the tires.