katarski said:
with the plow, look at the lining up of the hood. make sure that where the hood meets the cowl is even on both the driver and passenger sides. i bought another truck years ago and i had this problem, it makes it pretty much impossible to do an alignment when the frame is tweeked (bent).
That doesn't make sense, yes if the frame is bent it is about impossible to align it, but there is no way you can tell if the frame is bent by looking anywhere on the body, the body is mounted on rubber, which can sag and wear out and different rates. If the snow plow has cause any frame damage, which probably hasn't other than the springs are probably shot, you will be able to see it probably ahead of the front axle. That being said it takes a pretty good whack for a decent plow set up right to screw the frame up, break away springs should let go first on any minor hits with the plow, and usually let the blade lean enough to go ahead and come over top of the obstacle, unless you try to ply Toyotas and such
Sounds like a lucky find to me, our trucks are getting harder and harder to find with 100k and less miles. Take care of it and she'll go a few 100k more. Just don't get caught up comparing it to all these new trucks, they need some modding to make that power, but keep in mind, 10-12 years ago when these trucks came out the competition was 12v cummins and 6.5 chevies, the ol powerstrokes were CREAM OF THE CROP as far as light truck diesels go.