I'll resurrect this thread to point out a couple of things that my 4x4 project has revealed to me. I used M105 springs and frame mounts, cleaning every leaf, buffing sharp ends off the end of each leaf and adding an overload air bag.
The springs of an M105 and the front springs of a deuce are exactly the same spring... the difference is frame mounts. The deuce frame spring mount is down under the frame and thus the frame sets higher....but is narrower. The M105 mount is essentially on the outside of the frame and makes the rear end set lower unless other frame is made to raise it. I like the stability of a wider spring....and had the 105 frame and suspension. I did not use the M105 frame under the truck, I made a deeper frame.
The round U bolts on the 105 are replaced with large square ones. I used the torch to remove them and have some great half circles to weld for tie downs.
Comparing the springs of the many M105's that I have had to the springs on the front of my deuce is shocking. The springs, unless there is a built in difference in the curvature, show extreme wear of my A3 deuce. The springs on all of the 105's look new in comparison to my 97 A3. My guess is that the rebuild program of old A2's made into A3's used used springs.
So the point being....if you have a deuce with flattened front springs...get the springs from an M105 for the front to replace your worn out ones.
I put a plate along the frame that is 3" lower than the frame. It has slightly taller perches to bring it up too. It's ended about 2.5" higher at the rear axle than the front. When I replace the front springs with the much better condition M105 springs, I should gain about 2' of height and can make it so a front snow blade or crane is not taking the axle to the stops...maybe use 1-2 leafs from the overload to add a couple of leafs in the main pack. I may check out having bags on the front too as an A frame front crane will really pull it down trying to carry much.
Edit....I'm going to show you my mistake....it's going 3" longer on the bottom of the frame. I'm adding the photo of my solution to the bolt being right in the curve on the deuce C frame. A word of advise to someone doing a similar frame mod....go 2 " or 4-5", not 3"....unless you like dealing with the curve.