Sometimes, but most of the times first gear is stronger than rear.
A 4 wheel drive vehicle must have the same gear ratio in the front and rear differentials including the rim and tire size on all four corners.
Is a rear end in a 88 4x4 Chevy truck the same as the front in gears of a 93 Chevy 4x4
Both springs should be the same length.
Yes.
i dont know what sizes they are,but the ratios in front and rear diffs will be exactly the same as each other.
It depends on if it ie front or rear wheel drive or 3 wheel drive. If it is 4 wheel drive, it is not good and will cause problems. If it is either front or rear wheel drive keep the wheels the same on the drive wheels ie. front wheel drive, keep the 17 or 16 inch wheels on the front but make sure they are the same.
Is a rear end in a 88 4x4 Chevy truck the same as the front in gears of a 93 Chevy 4x4
Yes
they would be the same if both vehicles have same differentials . note that front and rear diffs on 4x4, must be matching ratio, to work properly when in 4x4
Same as the rear.
That would be fine if it stayed in the mud ALL THE TIMEand NEVER saw a hard surface. If this is a everyday driver then the front and rear gears MUST BE THE SAME RATIO. If they are not the same it will brake something.
The ratio is the same as the ratio between the number of teeth.
The # of teeth on the ring gear and the pinion gear. There is always more teeth on the ring gear then the pinion gear. And the way you determine the gear ratio is devide the # of teeth that's on the pinion gear into the # of teeth that's on the ring gear and that will be the gear ratio. The 4 gears that are the same size and run together is called the spider gears. Do not count those gears they have nothing to do with the gear RATIO.
no, the gears are different sizes and the housings are different shapes
Well you have to have the same gear in the front and in the rear of any set of axles so the tires spin at the same rate other wise you would wear your tires out from then skidding all the time, and or brake the transfer case gears...
It will be the same as the rear axle. Or take the VIN to the dealer, it is coded into the VIN number.
it will be the same as the rear diff
If it is going to be driven on roads / black top then they both MUST be the same gear ratio. If you are building a MUD TRUCK and it will NEVER be on a hard surface then they can be different.