when measuring ride hight you need to measure from the fender to the center of the wheel to not the ground
This guy must be kidding, right? Anyone understanding the dynamics of automotive suspension should know that how the body hangs on a car or truck has nothing to do with how it drives down the road. It doesn't mater if they used laser equipment, Strobe or did a totally manual alignment, the numbers and dynamics are the same. OP truck trended to the right before the brake swap so it is doubtful that brake drag is causing it, but it is surely easy to confirm. I've been aligning and setting up chassis since 1978 to a high degree of precision (Usually race cars and sports cars). I did three Corvettes, a 56 F100, a 2010 K3500, a 63 Chevy II SS, 06 Tahoe and a 66 Buick Grand Am last week, so I have some experience in this subject. In the USA, most of our roads slope to the right for rain drainage. Cars like Porsche and Corvette need about 0.2 degrees more positive caster on the right front than the left in order to counter act typical road crown. Full size trucks and SUVs like between 0.7 and 1.0 more positive caster on the right front to counter act road crown. Most crappy alignment techs look at the camber and caster numbers and if they are in the "Green", they just set the toe and go. On trucks and SUVs, it is a pain in the ass to adjust camber and caster, but it is part of a good alignment. A toe set is not a complete alignment. A lot of techs get paid flat rate so they make the same amount of money doing a full alignment as they do for a simple toe set, as long as everything is in the green. That would never fly in my shop. You want left and right camber to be within 0.10 degrees of each other. You want 0.7 to 1.0 degrees caster split (more on right than left) and you want 0.10 degrees toe in on each front corner. If it still pulls right on a reasonably flat road (2 to 4 percent slope to the right), then I would start looking at worn suspension parts, corner weight (failing or mis-adjusted spring or torsion bar), rear axle thrust angle, brake drag on right side, tire stagger. Lately I been seeing high mileage GM trucks where the torsion bars are beginning to fail.