I was in the same position as you a couple weeks ago 130,000 miles on tierods, but ordered sleeves instead of tierod assemblies . When I was lookin at some of the assemblies they looked like scab jobs in my opinion, which is scary from an engineering viewpoint. Sure I can look in a catalog for commercial off the shelf parts (doesn't mean I can get part locally) but that's only one component to an overall assembly. There is a custom aspect of the design, and what design Billy bob picked while using his wigi board is a mystery. All I am saying is the stock design has been vetted and some of these "this should work" designs might not be what they purport to be. I am not against aftermarket tie rods I just think one needs to be judicious in selecting the tierod assembly. For me I didn't like any of the tie rod assemblies that I looked at either because of the design, part supportable, no published real world data, etc.. Heavy duty tie rods have their place when implemented correctly for the intended application, I don't know if they are the correct solution for daily drivers.. I don't know how many times in this community people have come up with a "better" design and even posted pretty fea feel good pictures (which are subjective to the analysis setup and display schemes deployed).
In a world with unicorns and rainbows I would be checking all "my shit" regularly and I wouldn't have time for anything else.
Are these trucks with aftermarket tierods driven daily (how many miles are we talking, I reconize the mention of 30000 miles) and also being boosted launched?
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