Doing so will significantly increase bumpsteer because...
* The steering arm on the 1996-04 spindle is about 1.02" (26mm) lower (relative to the rest of the spindle) than the steering arm of any 1979-95 spindle.
On a lowered car this should even out, am I wrong on this?
I've done a lot of searching on this subject and it seems like EVERYONE that has literally said f*ck it and installed the 96+ spindles anyway has had ZERO issues with bump steer. I believe the reason why a majority of people don't use them is all the information online directing people away from the 96+ spindles. I have a set sitting in my garage and I'm installing a new K member this winter so when I put everything back together I'm going to install my 96+ and see what is the truth. I want the extra track width.If it was that simple I think this would have been debunked ages ago, but I'm far from an expert. I'm curious as well. I had a set of 96 spindles but sold them before I ever installed them.
I understand the logic of the fact that the steering geometry changes a little but I think people have found out how to correct it enough to make it work on the street. I understand it wouldn't be ideal for racing applications.