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#1
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Can anyone explain the primary differences between 1500 and 2500 trucks. Is it jsut drive train or what? I ask cause I'de like to increase the towing/hauling capacity of my 1500 but I've invested to much time/money in it to jsut trade in for a 2500 HD. Is it feasable to go to a salvage yard nd pick apart a junked 2500? Thanks in advance.
JCarr |
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#2
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
Well there is various components throughout the drivetrain that are a little beefier but the main things are the rearend and suspension and you could go down and pull these out of a 2500 fairly easily. The rest depends upon what you currently have in your rig as far as engine, tranny and most important brakes. (Even if your doggin it to pull something you but be damn sure you can stop it once its rollin.) Good luck buddy hope this gets ya started in the right direction!
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#3
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
JCarr,
2500s have options for lower gearing (numerically higher). For example, some of the 1500s may have had options for 3.42s and 3.73s, where the 2500 had options for 3.73s and 4.10s. 2500s have more powerful brakes. 2500s have another one or two leaf springs depending on the setup. 2500s have a stronger rear axle 14 bolt vs. a 10 or 12 bolt. 2500s have a stronger transmission, 4L80E vs. 4L60. 2500s have a stronger t-case (for 4 wheel drives). 2500s have the 8 lug wheels and load range E tires. Those are the most obvious differences, I'm sure there are several more. One more thing to consider......in the 1988-1998 years, the 2500s came in two versions (a light duty and a heavy duty). The heavy duty 2500s were much more common, they have the 8600 lb GVWR, were the 2500 light duties had a 7600lb or 7800lb GVWR (and a lower tow rating). The 2500 light duties were a good cross between the 1500s and the 2500s that one normally sees. What loads/weights are you expecting to haul/tow that would warrant the 2500 setup? How often are you / will you be hauling & towing these loads?
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1998 Silverado 2500HD 5.7L - 4x4 w/ Eaton Locking Diff 348,000 MILES 1993 Silverado 2500 5.7L - 4x4 w/ Eaton Locking Diff 449,000 MILES |
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#4
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
For the salvage yard visit, getting 2500 springs and the 14 bolt rear axle would be pretty simple. If you have 4x4, just make sure the gearing in the new rear axle matches the gearing in your front diff.
It's possible that the axle swap, with heaver rear brake rotors would require some minor adjustment once installed on the 1500. Does anyone else have more knowledge on this?
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1998 Silverado 2500HD 5.7L - 4x4 w/ Eaton Locking Diff 348,000 MILES 1993 Silverado 2500 5.7L - 4x4 w/ Eaton Locking Diff 449,000 MILES |
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#5
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
Im just trying to beef up me truck so that when I do go and haul a load of stone or mulch or what not (which I do fairly often for landsaping) my truck doesnt turn into a low rider.
How much work is entailed in that rear axle swap? as far as matching the gearing and what not, can you ellaborate? Thanks agian everyone. JCarr |
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#6
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
2500HD4X4 mentioned about brakes. I think these are a really big thing. You really shouldn't increase the weight capacity unless you are able to increase the braking capacity.
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#7
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
Quote:
The airbags may be something you would want to consider. The gearing is not that important if you have 2wd, you can have your computer recalibrated. For 4wd your replacement rear axle ratio needs to match your current front axle ratio or it will bind when you put it in 4wd. James |
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#8
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
The main thing is the rear end,Full floating axle (which simply means the axle on 3/4 & 1 tons all weight stress is on the axle tubes not the axles like all 1/2 tons). If you swap a complete unit you already have the big 13" drums included.You can pull an axle out of a 3/4 ton without even taking the wheel off, hub bearings are in tube, you can even tow, push/roll it with no axles.
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#9
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
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Hi, Somewhere recently I saw that the 2500HD had full floating rear axles, but the regular 2500 did not. Bob B |
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#10
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Full floaters for the 3/4 ton depends on the year. The light duty 2500 does not have full floaters. I think that some of the earlier 2500HDs had full floaters, but unfortunately my 1998 2500HD does not (I do not know when what years do and don't have them).
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1998 Silverado 2500HD 5.7L - 4x4 w/ Eaton Locking Diff 348,000 MILES 1993 Silverado 2500 5.7L - 4x4 w/ Eaton Locking Diff 449,000 MILES |
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#11
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
with regards for the 2500 light duty, they werent all that bad either... my dad had a 90 with the 700r4 and the 350 that only made 210 horses, but was enough nonetheless. he used to pull our family's 8000 pound trailer (big-ass fifth wheel) for camping with that truck and it could go up hills on the interstate without unlocking the torque converter. it was nothing compared to his 2002 silverado with the 6 liter, but it was still pretty good in the towing abilities area lol
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#12
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
Absolutely nothing wrong with the 2500 light duty. My '93 was a light duty, and of the 422,000 miles I put on it, the last 250,000 were used like it was a 2500HD or 3500. It had the 5.7L, 5 spd manual, 3.42 rear end. I prefer the 3.73 gearing that I have now, and the HD, but to be honest, either will do a great job!
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1998 Silverado 2500HD 5.7L - 4x4 w/ Eaton Locking Diff 348,000 MILES 1993 Silverado 2500 5.7L - 4x4 w/ Eaton Locking Diff 449,000 MILES |
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#13
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
lol yeah i loved the way it pulled at low rpm's. nothing like a chevy v-8 torque curve.
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#14
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
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Also, 2500HD in these years had stronger front ends, (cast A-arms)
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1996 K2500 Reg Cab Long Box 5.7 Vortec, HD 5-speed manual (NV4500) LT265/75R16E Toyo Open Country M/T Hypertech Power Programming (AWESOME) K&N Air Filter, Flowmaster Exhaust Centerforce Dual Friction Clutch Pioneer Head Unit, MTX 200 Watt Amp, MTX 10" Thunder 4500 sub "To be old and wise you must first be young and stupid"
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#15
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Re: Difference between 1500 and 2500
I've also heard that the 2500 frame uses thicker gauge steel.
I have air bags and 6 ply tires and a hydraulic dump installed under the factory bed and am a little worried about the frame bowing. We've all seen it when the cab to bed gaps are closing in, not good.
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