Yes, you can and plenty of guys do. It's just that it becomes one of those things that you have to put some thougt into. If you want the larger 1330 then it's best to grab the yoke from the truck you're getting the shaft from, otherwise it's a dealer-only part that runs $80 or so. A dual size U-joint is certainly a cheaper option but not quite as strong. The 1330's *are* larger & stronger than the 1310's but not by a huge margin so you have to weight the options, what will it cost you overall to upgrade ? How much can you get the yoke for compared to what a dual size cross will run ? If you have the old shaft AND the junkyard shaft (assuming they're from different years and have different size U-joints) a shaft shop can swap the pieces around (I like having shops look at, cleanup & rebalance junkyard & swap-meet shafts before I go & install them) so that everything works with the yokes in your truck. OR you can swap yokes, or this or that or whatever

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[email protected] 2x" width="20" height="20" /> There are really a lot of diferent ways to go but if you're paying a shop or guy to do the work that's just another variable to consider. For my money a dual size U-joint is a good way to go right off the bat until you figure out how you want the truck to ultimately be setup. It's a cheap way to buy time to kick around all the various options.