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.
My jeep wrangler keeps loking in gears
2.73
There are four ways to find a 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. 4 You can divide the number of teeth on the ring gear and divide by number of teeth on the pinion.
no
No, it should supply sufficient fuel pressure.
check your shifter bushings, next would be inside the trans at the shift collar.
yes
Yes, that is a good fit.
http://www.off-road.com/trucks4x4/bigbroncos.tech/Bronco-Rear-Axle-Codes-and-Ratios/ArticleStandard/Article/detail/304644your gear ratio is 3.55
Yes 87-95 wranglers are all the same
The 89's were all fuel injected. The 88's were either/or.
I have 89 Chevy extended cab pickup 350ci 700r trans i would like to know the rearend gear ratio and if 89 3/4 ton rear would help tow 6500# camper have replaced leafs with 3/4 springs seems original rear geared to high trans gets hot