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chevy suburban is mounted on a truck frame so most rear ends from any truck or tahoe which is also a truck will work if it is a late model 6 lug.
They are probably for drum brakes and you have disc on the front. Same bolt pattern, but smaller diameter on the inside of the wheel.
no way, car rear ends are alot smaller then truck rear ends. it will not work.
He appears tied to the front of the garbage truck lotso ends up on
It depends on the gear ratio of the rear ends. You can find this out in the glove compartment of your truck. It should tell you there. Hope this helps you out.
you can change from automatic to manual on straight axle front ends. the newer 4x4s with independent front ends can not (this type has CV axles or half shafts). although if you have a independent front end on and truck you can unplug the the harness on the front end. i have no idea why one would do that but its possable.
Most Chevy/GMC rearends will fit as long as they are the same series, 1500/2500/3500, but the most important thing is you MUST find one that has the same gear ratio as your front axle. Also look at Suburbans, similar chassis.
The ends sould be marked in and out, the out faces the front of the vehicle. The filter may also have an arrow which points to the front.
No it will not, Not even close. Car and truck rear ends are totally different.
A bent wheel, Tires out of balance, Loose Tie-rod ends- inner are outer, Idler arm loose. pitman arm Belt broke in tire. A wheel that has rust or something between it and the rotor when it was put on.
I had a hell of a time finding it, but it is under the hood on the passenger side, in front of the windshield washer fluid, in the covered box above the battery. There are two fuse panels inside the van as well, built into the ends of the dash, when you open your front doors you will see the acess covers.
1988-1998 requires API 80W-90 GL-5 gear lube. This is common for most rear ends