ladies and gentlemens, I am very pleased to annouce that I have once again wheeled my truck, the first time since almost a year ago. though i had the SAS back on the road a long time ago, there were many small issues that needed to be resolved, and other priorities ahead of it or an entire lack of time. in the last couple weeks i've gotten those things taken care of:
installing the gears- I got so busy after the swap that i put this off for a long time. over the summer i tried to have a shop do the job, but their guy turned out to know nothing about proper gear setups, so that didn't work out. i ended up doing it myself. it was a good learning experience, though a pain in the ass at times.
coil buckets- the TTB ones just weren't going to cut it. I put on the coil buckets from the donor bronco and moved them forward about 2". it did require some notching of the driverside bucket to clear the hump in the frame. more on this when i get some pics.
wristed radius arm- i never finished building it when i first did the sas. it's done now and man when you unpin it you can really see it working and see how much bind it eliminates from the suspension.
I don't have many pics as I did not have my own camera today, but i do have a few flex shots. at this time my shocks are a bit too short and limiting my droop maybe 2". this ramp was also a bit slippery and i couldn't get far enough up to actually lift a tire. i will need to trim the fenders a bit as you can see, but otherwise there don't seem to be any major clearance issues. the only thing i'm concerned about is the diff hitting the engine crossmember when i stuff both sides at the same time (like after getting a little air and coming down hard). i can't trim the crossmember any more without reworking the entire thing, so for now i will prolly put a bumpstop on the crossmember above the diff until a time when i have the motor out and can easily rebuild the crossmember. the driveshaft is also a bit close to the downpipe and there is a wear mark where it's hit. it doesn't touch when flexing, so i suspect this is also from stuffing both sides together on bumps.
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My first impression is that it feels much more stable than my old suspension when going through unever terrain. it's much softer in the front now so it doesn't feel like the truck's going to roll over when you drop your front tire into a rut. I'm very happy with it.

The Rescue Ranger: in pieces and scattered about the yard.