The newer pickups have a 8.8". The axles are held in with a c-clip at the differential end, so these ones won't stay in when broken. I would think the odds of braking an axle is low in the type of driving that I do anyway, I not sure how rammy you are. You'll have to judge that for yourself
. This diff is 2" wider than the Chrysler diff. The bolt pattern is different anyway, so I'll just re-manufacture new centers for the sprockets with the correct offset.
do you think it would be OK to weld a piece of round 1/4 or 3/8 plate to the axle ends & get them drilled to accept my sprockets ??
I don't have any experience with welding on axles to say one way or another. Can you just knock out the studs in the axle and locate and re-drill in between stud holes (assuming the plate is large enough) or re-drill your alum. sprocket. (or forget about the alum sprockets altogether and go with the newer style plastic sprocket). I think that when the diff has been narrowed, the general practice to narrow the axle is to cut the spline end and re-spline because it would be a lot less work than to build up the axle and machining for the bearing as well as the plate for the stud bolts.