Nov-20-2019 04:11 PM
Nov-24-2019 02:37 PM
richclover wrote:
2018 Ram 2500 Tradesman, Cummins. Towed the camper to Mesquite, NV, and noticed a persistent steering pull to the right. I blamed it on the slope of I-15 and, maybe, the crosswind working on the camper.
But, driving home without the camper the same thing happened.
Off to the local Big O tire shop. Alignment was very close to correct and after adjustment, the truck still pulled right. Wheels rotated front to back, then left front to right front... No change. Brakes checked, no dragging brake.
But wait... I noticed the truck looked to be not level sitting in the garage. The right front wheel well measured about 2” lower than the left. Right rear is about 1 1/2” lower than the left.
Measurements confirmed by the local dealer today. No reason found yet. Confirmed no broken springs, coil all around. Shocks are okay. Ball joints okay.
10,000 miles on the truck...
Has anyone heard of a similar problem?
Nov-24-2019 01:36 PM
Grit dog wrote:
^ Never seen that as part of any vehicles warranty coverage.
One could reasonably argue that alignment was off from the get go on a new vehicle and have a good chance of getting it covered, but doubt it's an official thing.
And not really applicable to the OPs situation, unless the steering pull started right after the dealer did the goober fix on the drag link adjuster.
In which case I'd been back to the dealer first.
On that note, this whole weld the nutz thing is a debacle and has smelled funny since it came out. Just, historically, have NEVER seen a tie rod or drag link adjuster loosen itself up on its own. My WAG is there were some left loose during production. Jose and Enrique fell asleep on the assembly line a few times from too many Tequilas at lunch break. And since no one has video evidence of them sleeping on the job, the cause is unknow and therefore, out of an abundance of caution, has become a recall.
If it is a concern I can think of at least 3 different, easy, ways off the top of my head to rectify it without breaking out the Lincoln and the 7018 rod. All of which are less invasive, more easily reversible and not as knee-jerk as "Welder up!"
But this would put just a leetle beet of responsibility on the vehicle owner to have an IQ over room temperature which open up the company to liability from the masses that are working in sweater weather IQ regions!
Nov-24-2019 11:45 AM
Grit dog wrote:
^ Never seen that as part of any vehicles warranty coverage.
One could reasonably argue that alignment was off from the get go on a new vehicle and have a good chance of getting it covered, but doubt it's an official thing.
And not really applicable to the OPs situation, unless the steering pull started right after the dealer did the goober fix on the drag link adjuster.
In which case I'd been back to the dealer first.
On that note, this whole weld the nutz thing is a debacle and has smelled funny since it came out. Just, historically, have NEVER seen a tie rod or drag link adjuster loosen itself up on its own. My WAG is there were some left loose during production. Jose and Enrique fell asleep on the assembly line a few times from too many Tequilas at lunch break. And since no one has video evidence of them sleeping on the job, the cause is unknow and therefore, out of an abundance of caution, has become a recall.
If it is a concern I can think of at least 3 different, easy, ways off the top of my head to rectify it without breaking out the Lincoln and the 7018 rod. All of which are less invasive, more easily reversible and not as knee-jerk as "Welder up!"
But this would put just a leetle beet of responsibility on the vehicle owner to have an IQ over room temperature which open up the company to liability from the masses that are working in sweater weather IQ regions!
Nov-24-2019 08:46 AM
Grit dog wrote:
^ Never seen that as part of any vehicles warranty coverage.
One could reasonably argue that alignment was off from the get go on a new vehicle and have a good chance of getting it covered, but doubt it's an official thing.
And not really applicable to the OPs situation, unless the steering pull started right after the dealer did the goober fix on the drag link adjuster.
In which case I'd been back to the dealer first.
On that note, this whole weld the nutz thing is a debacle and has smelled funny since it came out. Just, historically, have NEVER seen a tie rod or drag link adjuster loosen itself up on its own. My WAG is there were some left loose during production. Jose and Enrique fell asleep on the assembly line a few times from too many Tequilas at lunch break. And since no one has video evidence of them sleeping on the job, the cause is unknow and therefore, out of an abundance of caution, has become a recall.
If it is a concern I can think of at least 3 different, easy, ways off the top of my head to rectify it without breaking out the Lincoln and the 7018 rod. All of which are less invasive, more easily reversible and not as knee-jerk as "Welder up!"
But this would put just a leetle beet of responsibility on the vehicle owner to have an IQ over room temperature which open up the company to liability from the masses that are working in sweater weather IQ regions!
Nov-24-2019 08:10 AM
Nov-23-2019 06:49 PM
richclover wrote:Grit dog wrote:noteven wrote:
Keep in mind dealers are working from specs developed by the OEM and don’t get paid for warranty work unless OEM procedures are followed.
Good info in this thread.
Keep in mind, unless there’s more to the story, the OP took his twisted truck in to the dealer and left with no resolution. It ain’t rocket surgery!
And it appeared the OP was expecting a bill, not warranty.
Right, no resolution and, in fact, worse. The alignment adjustment the dealer added left me with the steering wheel off center. Easily fixed by cutting a weld on the draglink jam nut, making the adjustment and welding again. Which the 3rd tire shop did as part of the fix.
The dealer spent significant time looking for the problem, including putting the truck on their alignment rack. I’m thinking alignment is not covered by warranty on a 10,000 mile truck so I might get a bill for that. Their non-productive “investigation” I will argue against paying for.
Update on Monday.
Meanwhile I put some I-80 miles on the truck this morning. Happy to say that it’s driving 99.9% better. Thanks to Plains Tires, Bear River Drive, Evanston, WY.
Nov-23-2019 02:46 PM
noteven wrote:
Keep in mind dealers are working from specs developed by the OEM and don’t get paid for warranty work unless OEM procedures are followed.
Good info in this thread.
Nov-23-2019 02:37 PM
Grit dog wrote:noteven wrote:
Keep in mind dealers are working from specs developed by the OEM and don’t get paid for warranty work unless OEM procedures are followed.
Good info in this thread.
Keep in mind, unless there’s more to the story, the OP took his twisted truck in to the dealer and left with no resolution. It ain’t rocket surgery!
And it appeared the OP was expecting a bill, not warranty.
Nov-23-2019 01:54 PM
noteven wrote:
Keep in mind dealers are working from specs developed by the OEM and don’t get paid for warranty work unless OEM procedures are followed.
Good info in this thread.
Nov-23-2019 01:52 PM
Jennifer Koper wrote:
I am confused on as on below issue. Can anyone of you please help me on that.
Why Dodge Ram air suspensions fail? Thanks for your sincere cooperation.
Nov-23-2019 01:12 PM
Nov-23-2019 08:30 AM
Nov-23-2019 08:16 AM
Nov-23-2019 06:03 AM
Nov-22-2019 03:21 PM
NJRVer wrote:
Should have added in my post the Thuren alignment was done at an independent shop.
Dealer would only align to what Ram says the alignment should be, which of course is no good.