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New Clutch Question

Elwoodj
Explorer
Explorer
I smoked my clutch last week(took off in the wrong gear with the trailer attached). This was driver errow. The truck has 139000 miles on the oem clutch. It still works fine. The question is would you proactively replace it or don't fix until it is completely broken?
Elwood & Kathy
36' CK3 Mobile Suite - 2006
2004 Dodge Ram Cummins 6 speed
HO 600 373
15 REPLIES 15

Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
bobsallyh wrote:
Well since we fulltime and pulling a 40' fiver with our 2003 Ram dually quad, the throwout bearing went south at only 189,000 on the clock. Absolutely no problem with that. Was on the road and a shop put in a clutch that only made it 29,000, something wrong with that! So 2 months ago while at our snowbird location in Yuma, AZ., I had a South Bend clutch along with the hydraulics installed. Can't tell you anything about how it is or will be since there is only about 3,000 miles on it. I do know that the throwout bearing on the SB will probably be the weak link. Only aftermarket stuff on this truck is the exhaust brake and fiver hitch.


You're correct, if you are easy on the clutch, it may outlast the throwout, but you shouldn't have to worry about it for a long time, especially given how long the first one lasted. Tells me a lot of over the road miles (throwout is only doing work when your foot is on the clutch) and you don't sit at stop lights with the clutch pedal depressed.
SB is the gold standard for clutches. I abused an OFE clutch pretty good and got 100kmi out of it.
You should not have to touch the clutch or any of its components likely longer than you'll have the truck unless you're shooting for 500kmmiles!
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5” turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold

bobsallyh
Explorer II
Explorer II
Well since we fulltime and pulling a 40' fiver with our 2003 Ram dually quad, the throwout bearing went south at only 189,000 on the clock. Absolutely no problem with that. Was on the road and a shop put in a clutch that only made it 29,000, something wrong with that! So 2 months ago while at our snowbird location in Yuma, AZ., I had a South Bend clutch along with the hydraulics installed. Can't tell you anything about how it is or will be since there is only about 3,000 miles on it. I do know that the throwout bearing on the SB will probably be the weak link. Only aftermarket stuff on this truck is the exhaust brake and fiver hitch.

Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
You could buy a programmer and a new clutch for the cost of gears and not have to crack the axles open. If it's 2wd this may be a somewhat economical option, but if your doing it for help getting off the line with that big 5ver, a new stout clutch will keep you from smoking the clutch. NV5600s have good low and reverse creeper years as I recall.
IMO, new gear sets aren't a good roi.
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5” turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold

Elwoodj
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks to everyone for the replies. I am not going to change the clutch now. I will check the price of changing gears to 410.
Elwood & Kathy
36' CK3 Mobile Suite - 2006
2004 Dodge Ram Cummins 6 speed
HO 600 373

time2roll
Nomad
Nomad
Usually clutch will start the slipping in a higher gear. Slow down and use a lower gear and less throttle to get you to the destination to park the trailer and head to the repair shop.

memtb
Explorer
Explorer
Grit dog, You're correct, all I saw was 6-speed tranny. And, thought immediately of the later models (G-56 Trans). Though, if got it hot with 140K miles, I would be afraid it may let me down on the road. memtb
Todd & Marianne
Miniature Schnauzer's - Sundai, Nellie & Maggie Mae
2007 Dodge Ram 3500, 6.7 Cummins, 6 speed manual, 3.73 ratio, 4x4
2004 Teton Grand Freedom, 39'
2007 Bigfoot 30MH26Sl

Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
^Not a G56 trans. He has an 04. Different trans, different OE clutch.
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5” turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold

memtb
Explorer
Explorer
Elwoodj, The dual mass clutch systems in the Dodge leaves much to be desired! Consider yourself lucky to have made it that many miles, especially when doing heavy towing! I "smoked" mine while driving (with 5 yards of gravel in my dump trailer) down the highway, While accelerating to pass a slower vehicle. I had done some exhaust work and a power upgrade, and had "way more" power than I had clutch!

There are several aftermarket clutch systems available for the Dodges. They are designed to handle much more torque and horsepower than the stock clutch. The only drawback is noise! They are noisier than the dual mass system (which is explained in the clutch information).Southbend and Valair, come to mind. We went with Valair. There are clutch systems of different designs for different power outputs. If you do any power upgrades to your Cummings, an aftermarket clutch is a must.

Cummins Forums is a great source of info for all Dodge related topics. Good Luck, memtb
Todd & Marianne
Miniature Schnauzer's - Sundai, Nellie & Maggie Mae
2007 Dodge Ram 3500, 6.7 Cummins, 6 speed manual, 3.73 ratio, 4x4
2004 Teton Grand Freedom, 39'
2007 Bigfoot 30MH26Sl

p220sigman
Explorer
Explorer
If it isn't slipping, I would leave it be. Last vehicle we had that had a manual transmission was traded the day it turned 200K miles and was still on the original clutch. Again, not towing, but mostly city start/stop driving.

Cobra21
Explorer
Explorer
If you fried it, it will slip.

Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
You said it, still works fine. You didn't kill it, you just put like 10,000 miles on it in one dump of the clutch!
NV5600 clutches are pretty good. Seen guys run added power through them for a lot of miles.
But if you need a clutch.......Southbend.
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5” turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold

mtofell1
Explorer
Explorer
In the old days I drove cars with failing clutches for 10's of thousand's of miles. Granted, that was a Toyota Corolla and you're talking about towing so it's a bit difference. I'd at least run with it for a while and see how it feels. You usually have a lot of life left even once it starts to slip.

time2roll
Nomad
Nomad
No, I would not replace the clutch for one burn-in as long as it holds now. May still be good for 50,000+ miles.
If you need to spend some money consider some 4.10 differential gears to make it even easier on the clutch.

jus2shy
Explorer
Explorer
Typically, a clutch will start to slip long before it's ready to totally let go. If you notice your engine revving sooner/higher than before, or you've fully let go of the clutch and notice some play between engine and speed, then it's time to think about getting a new clutch.
E'Aho L'ua
2013 RAM 3500 Crew Cab 4x4 SRW |Cummins @ 370/800| 68RFE| 3.42 gears
Currently Rig-less (still shopping and biding my time)