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OK. I'll bite. What is it and what's its purpose to exist? Different in a good way, just curious.It can, after getting rid of 31 inches of frame. Offers better rearward visibility, too.View attachment 659956
Good point. I guess it's barely a 1007.2 these days.Its no longer a 1008; You may want to call that a 1007:5 or a 1007 & 1/2.
One minor detail came to mind. The wheels I have are aluminum. That just wouldn't look right.I think it would add to "WTF, did GM make that?" factor.
swap it out for a dually 14 bolt or Dana 70What's the easiest way to put dually wheels on a 14 bolt like ours?
Not that I've measured or tried, but it sure looks like it'd merely be a matter of removing the single wheel and bolting the duals on.What's the easiest way to put dually wheels on a 14 bolt like ours?
The springs on a 1 ton are closer to the frame for this very reason.Not that I've measured or tried, but it sure looks like it'd merely be a matter of removing the single wheel and bolting the duals on.
The only reason that I can see why it wouldn't work is if there isn't enough distance to the spring, which it sure looks like there is.
Keep in mind that while a dually pickup has the inner rear in the same track as the front tire, a cab and chassis usually puts the front tire's track right in the middle of the rears.
Which is just about what I would end up with.
EDIT: Measured a dually wheel just for kicks, and with a 235/80R17 tire it would protrude inwards about 10 inches from the hub face. That should leave around an inch of sidewall to spring clearance, and I think GM wheels have less offset than the Ram wheel I measured. Of course, with the bed in place and a single wheel axle it would require tubbed fenders and probably some trimming of the outer fender opening, like on a factory dually.