msgjd
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You are usually 110% correct with info on so many things, thus it is difficult for me to say you are mistaken about the front bearings .. I realize you were driving one for work and not owning/maintaining one yourself, thus what I am saying next is not at all directed at you, so here goes .. The front bearings are part of the scheduled maintenance requirement right in the manual,, aka, GREASE ... Each of those bearing packs has a zerk fitting... The "problem" with those bearings is not the bearings themselves, but their owners who are too ignorant or too lazy to remove the front tires at the required mileage/time intervals to grease the bearings .. There is a hole in the rotor hub plain as day to access the grease fitting.. I have owned 1970s AWD dodge/plymouths since 1983 and only replaced one front AWD hub bearing because PO failed to grease it . All who have changed out the 1970s AWD front hub bearing packs can agree they are a pain to replace and expensive to buy.. .. Worse yet, if the bearing gets to a point it spins the race(s), it hollows out the bearing hub and that means the new bearing will not be a press fit as it's supposed to be, thus the damaged side will have abnormal tire wear in the form of toe-in/toe out/camber inconsistencies..Another thing that kills mileage on these is the full-time 4WD. Mile marker used to make a kit to deactivate that into manual mode. No way to put locking hubs on it without a lot of parts changeout. That kit did markedly inprove the MPG.
The front wheel bearing (yes, just one) can fail and put you out of service fast. There is no maint on it other than changing the unit bearing out.
I drove one for many miles as a work-provided ride.
As for the full-time-four, it is agreed it affected fuel economy a bit , however, one does not need to buy any "kit" to convert it to 2wd , there are two other options and neither cost a penny.. . Simply removing either of the driveshafts helps mileage.. They can be run as a front-wheel-drive or as a rear wheel peel, it doesn't matter.. The xfer case has to be shifted to "Loc" for it to work with either shaft removed.. They handle and corner wonderfully as a front-wheel-drive, I must say.. Ran one particular truck "shaft-less" for more than a decade, exclusively on-road 100 miles every day .. But as one can imagine, doing it as "front wheel drive only" puts a higher amount of stress on the front driveshaft joints as well as the axle u-joints.. I only did it as an experiment for a few days, and went back to running it rear-wheel-peel for many years
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