What does this swap do?First thing it does is raise your roll center height (RCH) On a lowered truck the roll center can actually be below ground which is bad for handling.Second it changes the camber curve. The suspension's camber curve is backwards from where it should be and the top of the tire rolls out instead of in when under compression. The tall ball joints change this to allow the tire to camber in during compression.Third it fixes the factory bump steer issues on this front end. The steering arm on the spindles is about 5/8" closer to the lower pivot point (ball joint) then it should be. The tall lower ball joint effectively extends this measurement to within 1/8" which almost removes all bump steer.Fourth it will lower the front end 1/2"What is needed to do the swap?The ball joints from Howe, PP, upper control arms for "tall spindle swap" or you can C10 upper ball joints with UB Machine upper control arms like I did.You can do just uppers, just lowers or both. I would recommend doing lowers first to take care of the bump steer.
Well I tossed some changes up in there trying to summarize what you said to my understanding. I had forgot about the roll center argument and was thinking it was more for camber gain, which may relate, but that just means I need to put my nose in some chassis material again and more.Increasing the kingpin height does help with increasing camber gain, correct?