I had been spending months trying to figure out what shocks to use, and if any kits were required to convert my autoride shocks to standard Bilsteins.
It turns out it was ridiculously easy. Remove the old shocks, tie back the connectors, install the new shocks. To get rid of the service autoride suspension, remove the fuse, disconnect the battery, reconnect, and you're done. The whole job to do all four shocks, including swapping out the winter tires, took a 3-4 hours. However, I work slowly.
Use the B4600 shocks if you're keeping everything stock.
I came across so many posts from people not sure what shocks to use. A few have answered that you use the B4600 for stock or lowering, B5100 for lifting. That seems about right.
The ride is better, but I think the front shocks weren't so bad and were still dampening, so I didn't get a noticeable in ride quality. Pretty good for a 17 year old truck.
It turns out it was ridiculously easy. Remove the old shocks, tie back the connectors, install the new shocks. To get rid of the service autoride suspension, remove the fuse, disconnect the battery, reconnect, and you're done. The whole job to do all four shocks, including swapping out the winter tires, took a 3-4 hours. However, I work slowly.
Use the B4600 shocks if you're keeping everything stock.
I came across so many posts from people not sure what shocks to use. A few have answered that you use the B4600 for stock or lowering, B5100 for lifting. That seems about right.
The ride is better, but I think the front shocks weren't so bad and were still dampening, so I didn't get a noticeable in ride quality. Pretty good for a 17 year old truck.