Wanted to revive this thread after my interesting find on the torsion bar issue. And post my "fix", in case someone else runs into this. (Note this is all before alignment)
So the truck sits as:
Rear: 37.75"
Front: 35.50"
I put the 3" keys, and maxed them out at first.
To my disappointment the front only came up 1". ...on a 3" key maxed out..
I took the key back out and started checking out the torsion bar, and noticed the front of the bar that goes into the lower control arm is really wallowed out.
I'm not sure if it is the shoulders on the bar itself, or the holes in the arms, or both. But you can turn the bar almost 1/8 turn before it hits the other shoulder .
With how little of a turn makes a big difference, I got to thinking that this could actually be affecting a lot of the lift.
So I decided before buying new bars or control arms, I would make shims.
Hose clamp material is pretty strong, so I used it to fish through the gap on each shoulder of the torsion bar through the control arm. It took 2 strips stacked to fill the gap at each shoulder. This keeps the torsion bar from turning 1/8 turn before actually beginning to lift the truck. It will begin lifting almost immediately.
Sure enough, the truck lifted slightly past level. Actually had to back it off a little bit to get it a quarter inch below the rear.
Rear: 37.75
Front: 37.50
Will this continue to work? I'm not sure, but I figured it was worth a try, and also wanted to write it here in case someone else runs into the same issue. I'll update if it falls apart next week or something. the good news is, if it fails and a shim comes out, it will just start sagging slightly in the front again, so there is not really any risk of it coming apart on the road or being a danger.
Someday I'll probably just need to replace the bars and control arms altogether