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.
The gear ratio of a train, also known as its speed ratio, is the ratio of the angular velocity of the input gear to the velocity of the output gear. The gear ratio is very important when it comes to physics.
3.73 or 4.10
final axle ratio 3.55
most definitely
Tooth count depends on the gear ratio.
its either 355 or 373 there are tags on diff that give you numbers
the front should be wahever the back is. count them on the ring gear then count the pinoin and devide that and it will give you the gear ratio
1993 - 1998 will all be swapable. just make sure you have the same gear ratio as the front.
more than likely a 3.08 gear.
The front differential uses 80W90 gear oil.
If the front is 3.55, then the rear needs to be 3.55
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.