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Memphis equipment made a kit to replace the gears and have a manual engagement (REB). I recently swapped out the whole transfer case due to wear issues (not REB related). The REB worked fine. I do not know if Memphis still offers this kit.
Maibach Tractor has the high compression pistons/sleeves. AFAIK, the tractor has the same combustion chamber design as the multifuel, just lower compression.
Even a full rear exhaust on my bobbed deuce, there was a ton of whistle noise from under the hood with the C turbo. You will be miles ahead in noise reduction if you get the D turbo.
You misinterpreted my post. My intent was to state that there seems to be a common belief that the law requires a mechanical connection and yet an OEM has produced a vehicle wihtout said connection. This implies that these law(s) no longer exist.
I am 99% sure that it WAS illegal in SD. However, I can't find the old motor vehicle code book. It appears like the consensus is that there must be a mechanical connection between the steering wheel and the front axle. However, Chevy had the quadrasteer in their pickups and I can't imagine...
To add a little detail:
There are four general types of bond mechanisms : ionic (NaCl), covalent (metals), mechanical (bolt and nut, velcro), and van der waal (scotch tape, gecko). It is generally accepted that paint adheres via a combination of van der waal and mechanical bonds. Sandblasting...
You'll spend more to have them recentered than it will cost to get the right wheel. Rims are $50-100 each in my area. Recentering is ~$300 each. Used tires are easy to find at truck shops.
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