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After my Cummins was installed in my '68 F250 Highboy my truck was leaning to the drivers side a lot. A friend and I looked at it yesterday and the drivers side front spring is compressed 1" more than the passenger side. I know I have to get new front springs (and eventually a new front axel) to handle the weight of the Cummins, but to order the springs I really should know the weight difference left to right. I've tried to find a garage with a "four corner scale" like they use for race cars but have had no luck - any ideas on how to tell how much heavier the drivers side is than the passenger?
check with some of your local roundy rounders, most of the good ones will have their own set of scales and for a minimal charge would set your truck on them.... But too be accurate on determining the size of springs required for replacement you should have the old one's removed and have the front end setting on the snubbers..... A good parts store, not the one's with the guy who sez if it isn't in the computer it doesn't exist, will have a spring catalog that will list springs of the same configuration by load rating and/or spring rating..... IMO anything else is just guesswork.
After my Cummins was installed in my '68 F250 Highboy my truck was leaning to the drivers side a lot. A friend and I looked at it yesterday and the drivers side front spring is compressed 1" more than the passenger side. I know I have to get new front springs (and eventually a new front axel) to handle the weight of the Cummins, but to order the springs I really should know the weight difference left to right. I've tried to find a garage with a "four corner scale" like they use for race cars but have had no luck - any ideas on how to tell how much heavier the drivers side is than the passenger?
Peter
The main leaf will have a Ford ID number stamped on it near the eye bolt.
1967/71 F250 4WD
These two are the only front springs listed in the 1964/72 Ford Truck Parts Catalog.
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