Aug-22-2017 06:44 AM
Sep-03-2017 10:35 AM
Sep-02-2017 12:26 PM
Harold Fairbanks II wrote:
I was looking up the overheating problem you are having with your Dodge truck and in the Dodge service manual it states to replace the vehicle with either a GM or Ford vehicle of similar type.
Aug-24-2017 06:17 PM
Aug-24-2017 07:45 AM
Aug-24-2017 05:59 AM
Aug-23-2017 08:00 PM
garyp4951 wrote:
After a $900 repair bill for a water pump, crank sensor that the belt broke, and new belt, I made the 2 hour drive home.
As soon as I got of the interstate in slow traffic it started running HOT again, and you might say I'm PO'd. I called the dealer, and he said it might be a head gasket since it got hot when the water pump broke.
I have a diesel shop friend nearby, and will get him to check it out, and hope for the best.
As soon as its fixed I think I'm done with this over heating, and ac ****. The problem is all the newer ones have so much emission junk on them, but at least they would be warranted.
Aug-23-2017 05:28 PM
garyp4951 wrote:Really hope you get some good news from the diesel shop. IMO simple overheating from blown hoses, fan belts and water pumps, puts more vehicles in junkyards than anything else. Sometimes you only have seconds to get that engine shutdown in order to prevent serious engine damage. Even though the temperature gauge may read ok (at the sensor) while you're doing everything possible to get off the road, temps can easily climb dangerously high in other parts of the engine without you knowing it. Been there, done that.
. . . As soon as I got of the interstate in slow traffic it started running HOT again, and you might say I'm PO'd. I called the dealer, and he said it might be a head gasket since it got hot when the water pump broke.
I have a diesel shop friend nearby, and will get him to check it out, and hope for the best . . .
Aug-23-2017 04:19 PM
Aug-23-2017 03:56 PM
Aug-23-2017 03:55 PM
garyp4951 wrote:
BTW the wrecker was a 98 Powerstroke 7.3 that pulled the truck and Rv!
Aug-23-2017 03:35 PM
Aug-23-2017 09:30 AM
Aug-22-2017 07:01 PM
Aug-22-2017 06:07 PM
Grit dog wrote:IdaD wrote:garyp4951 wrote:
My Good Sam roadside came in handy, and towed the truck and 5er to a campground, and Ram dealer.
The water pump pulley broke, and lost the belt while in heavy one lane construction traffic on hey 45 on our way home from Gulf Shores AL, and I lost steering, and brakes immediately, but was able to get on the gravel shoulder using the trailer brake.
I could have repaired it myself if I was home, but now just sitting in the campground 100 miles from home waiting on word from the dealer.
Same thing happened to my 2015 a few weeks ago and left us high and dry on a sunny (nearly) 100 degree day. The worst part of it was a weekend in a dinky rural Oregon town so the part wasn't available for a few days. We were three hours from home so we had somebody come pick us up and then went back later in the week to pick up the truck and trailer. That was after a night in a local campground trying to figure things out.
Sucks but life goes on. I am stocking the camper with coolant and distilled water, and the truck now has a spare water pump and serpentine belt under the back seat just in case. The good news is that the fix is relatively easy so some roadside wrenching isn't out of the question if help can't be summoned easily.
I've reached the conclusion that water pumps on Cummins trucks are problematic. Certainly not the worst thing in the world from a repair standpoint but not ideal either. I'll probably swap mine out every 2-3 years going forward.
Reading the interweb drivel on a Cummins forum, the newer 4th gens seem to have an issue with early water pump failure.
Pre 2014 I don't believe it was an issue. Avg lifespan 150kmi plus.
Definitely something to consider in the spare parts bin on the newer trucks. Given the frequency it happens on the web, if I had a new ram I'd think hard about swapping it at about 50kmi.
Seems like a bad batch because I believe it's basically the same pump from back to the 12V and 24V engines.
Replaced mine at 140k last year and it was still good.....preventative maintenance.