SimpolMike
TDR MEMBER
All,
I have seen a few clutch / transmission discussions, but wanted to post this one as I am the lucky owner of a 2018 2500 I purchased new one year ago, that has had a clutch fail at under 3k miles. – That is not a typo.
I have barely been driving it, partly because I have been too busy and partly because I had the option of limiting the miles for the time being. At under 3k miles I had the clutch slipping on a minor uphill grade, essentially empty, just hauling people.
I have not towed with the truck yet, as I was waiting for about 3k to 3500 miles before I hook up the flat deck and throw another truck or small back-hoe on it and haul it over the pass and back to help give it a work out.
Just to stave off the host of questions, no the truck is stock, no modifications. I still have my 2000 with the NV 5600, and when the transmission was dropped at 150k to replace a pilot bearing some years ago, my clutch still had 47-50% remaining, just as a reference to past driving history.
I don’t have the truck back yet, so don’t have a root cause of failure, but I will update this post when I do. I will say the service manager of the dealer I took it to has been doing a decent job of advocating for me.
My primary purpose of the post was that if it can happen to me, it can happen to others. Maybe I was just unlucky and got the one in 100k that someone messed up on the line.
I have to say that it is more than a little painful to have something like this occur on an infant of a truck, especially one that costs what these do.
I have seen a few clutch / transmission discussions, but wanted to post this one as I am the lucky owner of a 2018 2500 I purchased new one year ago, that has had a clutch fail at under 3k miles. – That is not a typo.
I have barely been driving it, partly because I have been too busy and partly because I had the option of limiting the miles for the time being. At under 3k miles I had the clutch slipping on a minor uphill grade, essentially empty, just hauling people.
I have not towed with the truck yet, as I was waiting for about 3k to 3500 miles before I hook up the flat deck and throw another truck or small back-hoe on it and haul it over the pass and back to help give it a work out.
Just to stave off the host of questions, no the truck is stock, no modifications. I still have my 2000 with the NV 5600, and when the transmission was dropped at 150k to replace a pilot bearing some years ago, my clutch still had 47-50% remaining, just as a reference to past driving history.
I don’t have the truck back yet, so don’t have a root cause of failure, but I will update this post when I do. I will say the service manager of the dealer I took it to has been doing a decent job of advocating for me.
My primary purpose of the post was that if it can happen to me, it can happen to others. Maybe I was just unlucky and got the one in 100k that someone messed up on the line.
I have to say that it is more than a little painful to have something like this occur on an infant of a truck, especially one that costs what these do.