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Alignment questions

From : Annonymous

Q: whats the largest tire size you can run on a stock 02 3500 4x4 dually without any scrubbing at all thanks. -- nathan w. collier http//7slotgrille.com http//utilityoffroad.com .

Replies:

From : snoman

fellas just out of pure luck i replaced mine this past saturday. ive got a 99 durango. it showed the exact same symptoms. i didnt even bother with the codes figuring it was cheaper and easier to try replacing the sensor. the part was about $35 from dodgeparts.com. it took me 20 minutes to install. the problem went away immediately. on the durango the sensor was pretty easy to reach. i didnt even jack er up and didnt have to remove the spare. --phil glenn wrote from what i have read its a speed sensor located in the rear differential. my dakota has the same symptoms and i believe its fairly common. i havent repaired mine yet but they tell me the part is $35.00. hi allmy abs/brake light stays on.at first it would only be on awhile and when you turned off the engine and started it back up it would stay off. now it stays on.i also noticed the speedometer doesnt work untill you hit about 30 miles per hr.i took it to a shop and they used a hand held checker to test it. it shows 2 errors7271 ecu rom checksum error and 71 is ecv ram rod wright error. the guys didnt know what this means. anyone got any ideas thanks! .

From : Annonymous

thats incorrect. a transmission can increase torque. for example a hypothetical transmission could take 50 ft-lbs of torque on input and produce 300 ft lbs of torque. numbers are arbitrary. no laws of physics are violated by increasing torque on output. no laws of physics are violated because its not an increase its a reconfiguration. -- max give a man a match and he is warm for a short while. light him on fire and he is warm for the rest of his life. on thu 23 jun 2005 005539 gmt max dodge max340@verizon.net wrote so is your claim that a transmission cannot produce torque. it cant create it but it can produce it. nope. it cannot produce torque anymore than it can create it. it can however transmit it. hence the name transmission. thats incorrect. a transmission can increase torque. for example a hypothetical transmission could take 50 ft-lbs of torque on input and produce 300 ft lbs of torque. numbers are arbitrary. no laws of physics are violated by increasing torque on output. btw i think roget can help you with your problem understanding create and produce as being pretty much the same in the context which you used them. -- .