dgoodwin10
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2014
- Location
- Birmingham, AL
This thread will document swapping my 2003 Chevy Silverado 1500 IFS 2WD to a solid axle 4wd. If you’re looking for a throwdown rock crawler build, then lower your expectations to extreme overlander and I’ll likely meet your goal.
This was my first car. The truck got me through high school, college, 3 jobs, was the get away rig for our wedding and was my daily driver for 16 years. To say its a special rig (to me, anyway) is an understatement. Sorry in advance for all the words in thisfirst post entire thread – short and succinct just isn’t my writing style. For all of you that don’t like to read or generally hate a good story, I’ll include copoius amounts of pictures and TLDR’s along the way.
TLDR: My dad bought this 2003 Silverado brand new, gave it to me in 2008 and was my daily driver until October of 2024 when a lower control arm mount failed.
The truck was delivered to my parents in April of 2003 with only a few hundred miles on it. It was a well optioned LS trim package with a 5.3L, towing package, cloth bucket seats and a Bose sound system. Due to a series of fortunate events I was given the keys to this truck when I turned 16 in Feburary of 2008 with 55k miles on the odometer with strict instructions to take care of it since it was the only one I’d ever get.
I did all the typical high school things to it – minor stereo work, 5” lift (which is still on it today) a brush guard, Flowmaster dual exhaust, etc. Over the years the exhaust was swapped for something quieter, a 9.5” 14 bolt rear axle was installed after 2 10 bolt failures, front ARB bumper from a Nissan Xterra was installed with a winch, hydroboost, Suburban twin piston rear calipers, electric fans, and a few other odds and ends. Overall, a great truck that I’d refined over the years to suit my needs but the lack of a front diff was always a limiting factor.
With 297k miles on the clock, the truck had developed what I can only describe as death wobble in Summer of 2024 which lead to a lower control arm bracket cracking and ultimately pulling off the frame (in my driveway, thankfully). What I think happened was a leaking hydroboost unit kept a control arm bushing soaked in PS fluid, causing it to disintegrate, creating the wobble and fatiguing the mount. Coincidentally I’d picked up a 2015 Silverado at the same time and was forced to put the old truck in storage on October 30th, 2024 until I could hash out a plan to fix it.
This was my first car. The truck got me through high school, college, 3 jobs, was the get away rig for our wedding and was my daily driver for 16 years. To say its a special rig (to me, anyway) is an understatement. Sorry in advance for all the words in this
TLDR: My dad bought this 2003 Silverado brand new, gave it to me in 2008 and was my daily driver until October of 2024 when a lower control arm mount failed.
The truck was delivered to my parents in April of 2003 with only a few hundred miles on it. It was a well optioned LS trim package with a 5.3L, towing package, cloth bucket seats and a Bose sound system. Due to a series of fortunate events I was given the keys to this truck when I turned 16 in Feburary of 2008 with 55k miles on the odometer with strict instructions to take care of it since it was the only one I’d ever get.
I did all the typical high school things to it – minor stereo work, 5” lift (which is still on it today) a brush guard, Flowmaster dual exhaust, etc. Over the years the exhaust was swapped for something quieter, a 9.5” 14 bolt rear axle was installed after 2 10 bolt failures, front ARB bumper from a Nissan Xterra was installed with a winch, hydroboost, Suburban twin piston rear calipers, electric fans, and a few other odds and ends. Overall, a great truck that I’d refined over the years to suit my needs but the lack of a front diff was always a limiting factor.
With 297k miles on the clock, the truck had developed what I can only describe as death wobble in Summer of 2024 which lead to a lower control arm bracket cracking and ultimately pulling off the frame (in my driveway, thankfully). What I think happened was a leaking hydroboost unit kept a control arm bushing soaked in PS fluid, causing it to disintegrate, creating the wobble and fatiguing the mount. Coincidentally I’d picked up a 2015 Silverado at the same time and was forced to put the old truck in storage on October 30th, 2024 until I could hash out a plan to fix it.

. It took a solid day to get the crossmember cut out, Frame rails cleaned off and the box tacked in but felt like a huge milestone.