gkainz
Final Approach
for me ... it's the last line in the MasterCard (TM) commercial
"I love my truck!" - Priceless!
"I love my truck!" - Priceless!
that's my math. up here, a new 1 ton diesel will retail for 65, be negotiable to low 50's and a 4 year old one, with 70K on it, will sell for 45K. so $10k to drive a car four years newer with 70K less on the clock? seems like "new" wins in this oneOther thing is depreciation. Diesels hold their value a lot longer.
that's my math. up here, a new 1 ton diesel will retail for 65, be negotiable to low 50's and a 4 year old one, with 70K on it, will sell for 45K. so $10k to drive a car four years newer with 70K less on the clock? seems like "new" wins in this one
The other thing there is the fact that you know how it's taken care of from day 1. Finding a used truck that hasn't had the crap beat out of it is really, really hard.
I didn’t beat the crap out of mine, but I did blow it up. I fixed it though.
In your case the previous owner had set it up to fail, though. As I recall you did a lot of work to fix his stupidity. And, well, that's exactly the sort of thing I'm talking about. When you buy used, you tend to get something that's been improperly upgraded or maintained at some point and otherwise beat on.
I know him pretty well and he didn’t know. Downside of using the wrong mechanic mostly. But yeah, mods have to be done from stock by people who know what they’re doing. Usually because they’ve done it wrong enough times that they spent a lot of money learning how not to do it.
The Internet helps the modding world immensely. One can learn from someone else’s $12,000 mistake. LOL. But it’s easy to miss the stories and make the mistakes again.
I’m not sure if mine would have been fixed right without the reference from @gkainz to a crazy C-130 driver who’s made all of the mistakes that can be made on a Cummins but also does it to his own truck and not customer’s trucks! I still haven’t gotten a ride in his triple-turbo monster. But he says I can’t do it to mine, I need a different case. I have the cracking one that should have been a class action suit against Cummins.
So he studded mine and limited the boost and said “that’s enough for what you’re doing” and he was right. Then I limited the boost even further by setting the alarm 5 lbs below his limit which is loud and annoying and makes me get my foot out of it. Hahaha.
Changed oil on mine yesterday. It’s getting dangerously close to 150,000 miles for a 2001.
Wouldn’t want people to think I work it too hard.
"Her shaft is bent and her rear end leaks, you can fix her quick with an oily rag. Use a nail as a starter; I lost the key. Don't pay no mind to that whirrin' sound. She use a little oil, but outside a' that, she's cherry."
At 150k on a 2001, I think you've got one of the lowest usage rates of a diesel Ram out there.
I generally figure 15-20k miles per year will end up being about average on mine.
It’s actually 142.
I’ve been driving it a little to get my stick shift “fix”. LOL. I try not to light up the rear tires since I’m burning up four of them.
I’m normally a Valvoline guy since that’s what Cummins wants but I gave up yesterday and switched to Rotella T4 in it.
Valvoline Blue or Extreme Blue or any of their Blue lineup is getting strangely hard to find around here and I didn’t feel like buying three gallons on the Internet.
And Rotella is everywhere. Can’t walk into any auto place without tripping over the stuff. The place I went yesterday has it in 5 gallon buckets. Ha.
Went to the dealer for my first oil change and fuel filter change... after complaining about the high cost, it still ended up costing... $450. To be fair, they took $100 off what their normal price was. But... I can do it myself for about $150 using full synthetic (which they used) and the genuine MOPAR/Cummins filters.
Only reason I went is because it's under warranty and, well, if something goes wrong that just makes it easier to say "It's on you, not me." But at that price, I'll have to debate whether to bother or not.
Ah. Warranty protection money. (In a gravelly, breathy voice) "Nice warranty you got there. Be a shame if anything ... happened to it."
It’s not the Cummins that would worry me: it’s the truck they built around it. Lots of potentially expensive electronics in new vehicles.Yeah, exactly. My mom had an Infiniti G35 she bought back in... I guess it was 2003. In 2005 she was driving back to NYC from Virginia, and somewhere around Delaware the oil light came on. Drove it the remaining 200 miles home and the thing made all kinds of noises. Infiniti refused to do anything because they said I'd changed the oil filter wrong (I didn't) so it was my fault.
Miraculously, I put new oil in the thing and it actually ran fine, just some lifter ticking. Sold it, I should've kept it for myself.
But now that I'm 6 months into my 5 year/100k mile warranty on the Ram, it gives something to think about. Reality is it's a Cummins and has about a 0.0000001% chance of a problem during the warranty period. It's just expensive if it does happen.
I don't think the engine much cares whether it's Valvoline or Rotella.
But now that I'm 6 months into my 5 year/100k mile warranty on the Ram, it gives something to think about. Reality is it's a Cummins and has about a 0.0000001% chance of a problem during the warranty period. It's just expensive if it does happen.
It’s not the Cummins that would worry me: it’s the truck they built around it. Lots of potentially expensive electronics in new vehicles.
About a month ago, the Cummins in our fire department tanker truck ('tender' for you westerners) lunched a turbo and 3 pistons. At 12,000 miles .
It’s actually 142.
I’ve been driving it a little to get my stick shift “fix”. LOL. I try not to light up the rear tires since I’m burning up four of them.
I’m normally a Valvoline guy since that’s what Cummins wants but I gave up yesterday and switched to Rotella T4 in it.
Valvoline Blue or Extreme Blue or any of their Blue lineup is getting strangely hard to find around here and I didn’t feel like buying three gallons on the Internet.
And Rotella is everywhere. Can’t walk into any auto place without tripping over the stuff. The place I went yesterday has it in 5 gallon buckets. Ha.
sounds like there are about 3 things that go wrong, and none of them should result from a "you didn't use the right oil"Yeah, exactly. My mom had an Infiniti G35 she bought back in... I guess it was 2003. In 2005 she was driving back to NYC from Virginia, and somewhere around Delaware the oil light came on. Drove it the remaining 200 miles home and the thing made all kinds of noises. Infiniti refused to do anything because they said I'd changed the oil filter wrong (I didn't) so it was my fault.
Miraculously, I put new oil in the thing and it actually ran fine, just some lifter ticking. Sold it, I should've kept it for myself.
But now that I'm 6 months into my 5 year/100k mile warranty on the Ram, it gives something to think about. Reality is it's a Cummins and has about a 0.0000001% chance of a problem during the warranty period. It's just expensive if it does happen.
I had a 2006 G35x and in conversations with the service manager, he told me "just change the oil as recommended. These engines are really sensitive to bad or old oil".YMy mom had an Infiniti G35 she bought back in... I guess it was 2003. In 2005 she was driving back to NYC from Virginia, and somewhere around Delaware the oil light came on.
How's the price of the RoSmella compare to Costco's Delo?
No idea. Haven’t had or wanted a Costco membership in many years.
Went to the dealer for my first oil change and fuel filter change... after complaining about the high cost, it still ended up costing... $450.
BIL’s 2016 Ram 2500 had a few very expensive failures in the first 10-15K miles. I believe one had to do with the DEF injection system, which ruined the DPF. It was covered under warranty, but he was still pretty ****ed off about it.
He’s also mad that they can’t reprogram his TPMS sensors to a lower psi than the factory minimum. He got aftermarket wheels/tires and they max at 65psi or so (instead of 80psi), which shows low pressure warnings.
Sharp looking truck otherwise.
BIL’s 2016 Ram 2500 had a few very expensive failures in the first 10-15K miles. I believe one had to do with the DEF injection system, which ruined the DPF. It was covered under warranty, but he was still pretty ****ed off about it.
Does he do a lot of short trips? I live in a small town so everything is close. Several folks around here have had problems with the DPF. The local dealer that I go to church with does not recommend buying a diesel right now because of that problem.
I have rancher friends in Texas that haven't had a problem with their newer diesel. They drive considerable distances when they use their trucks, GM, Ford and Dodge. When on the ranch they change to the multi passenger 4 wheelers unless they are moving a trailer.
Short distance driving in a diesel is considered extreme heavy duty since the coolant, oil and everything else doesn't get a chance to warm up.
I assume just doing a tractor pull series each weekend will keep everything burned outThat's all true, and part of why I was comfortable buying the Ram. My commute is 20 miles one way and generally I drive 50-100 miles a day. Airport is 40 miles each way. So everything gets warmed up.
The DPF requires highway driving and will get angry if you don't do enough of it.
I assume just doing a tractor pull series each weekend will keep everything burned out
Does he do a lot of short trips? I live in a small town so everything is close. Several folks around here have had problems with the DPF. The local dealer that I go to church with does not recommend buying a diesel right now because of that problem.
I have rancher friends in Texas that haven't had a problem with their newer diesel. They drive considerable distances when they use their trucks, GM, Ford and Dodge. When on the ranch they change to the multi passenger 4 wheelers unless they are moving a trailer.
Short distance driving in a diesel is considered extreme heavy duty since the coolant, oil and everything else doesn't get a chance to warm up.
I suspect most folks don't ever even get into the boost on their ecoboost and will someday pay for that. With my V6 3.5L you really won't boost ever in normal driving unless you get into the pedal a bit on an on-ramp or something.Best thing you can do for these trucks is hook up 10,000 lbs now and then and tow it halfway across the country.
I suspect most folks don't ever even get into the boost on their ecoboost and will someday pay for that. With my V6 3.5L you really won't boost ever in normal driving unless you get into the pedal a bit on an on-ramp or something.
While towing my camper - it's always boosting.
Same thing applies really. Lots of short-trips and lack of turbo usage in an ecoboost results in excessive carbon buildup, which has created some failures. Additionally the oil not warming up causes some other problems. The people that work their ecoboost have not had the carbon issues.I was referring specifically to the Cummins powered trucks, but it would be interesting to see whether the Ecoboost is happier with routine higher power like the Cummins or not. Generally gasoline powered engines wear out faster from it, but the Ecoboost V6 is different in that regard.
Maybe by running yours hard you'll have the best longevity of all.