8 because 4x2 is 8 and 4x4 is sixteen so if you subtract 8 from sixteen you get 8
Yes
4x2 is propeled by only 2 wheels but w/ extra H-Power the 4x4 is propeled by all 4 wheels w/ the same amount of H-Power.
yes as long as its the 6 cylinder and boh have to be either 4x4 or 4x2. can mix and match the two types of drive trains. only the valve body within the tranny itself can be swapped between 4x4 and 4x2.
It'll bolt up to the engine, but the problem is that you'll either have to fabricate a cover for the rear of the engine and an adapter to mate the output shaft to the driveshaft. The difference between a 4x4 transmission and a 4x2 transmission is that the 4x4 transmission was designed to bolt up to a transfer case, not directly to the driveshaft.
information is given in drivetrain and inches Regular cab 4x2=75.8, 4x4=76.2 Double Cab 4x2=75.8, 4x4=76.2 Crewmax 4x2=75.6, 4x4=76.0
The center shaft that goes through the center of the transmission is longer on the 4x4 trans. so the transfur case will fit on it. 2x2 trans. shaft is shorter cause you have no transfur case.
Twice the number is something like 3x2, 4x2.... Squared is 3x3, 4x4. It's one number multiplied by itself twice
2dr 4x2: $24,120 2dr 4x4: $26,720 4dr 4x2: $29,920 4dr 4x4: $32,520
there is more 4x2's than 4x4's because they are cheaper to make and, not as many people want 4 wheel drive
The numbers on truck models refer to the weight rating. Ford F100/F150/F250/F350, Dodge D100/1500/D200/2500/D300/3500, Chevy 10/1500/20/2500/30/3500. The "F" in ford models just means FORD and the "D" in Dodge models just means DODGE. The 1's series (10,100,150,1500) means that the truck is rated ½ Ton, the 2's series (20,200,250,2500) means the truck is rates for ¾ Ton, and 3's series (30,300,350,3500) means that the truck is rated for 1 Ton. For pre 1987 Chevy trucks there was the "C" line and the "K" line. The "C" line means the truck is a Two Wheel Drive (4x2) and the "K" means that the truck is a Four Wheel Drive (4x4). In 1987 they started using the "V" line and the "R" line. The "R" line means the truck is a Two Wheel Drive (4x2) and the "V" means that the truck is a Four Wheel Drive (4x4). C/R10 = ½ Ton 4x2 (Two Wheel Drive) K/V10 = ½ Ton 4x4 (Four Wheel Drive) C/R20 = ¾ Ton 4x2 (Two Wheel Drive) K/V20 = ¾ Ton 4x4 (Four Wheel Drive)
the only difference would be the controls in the dash