How? How is a larger tank a factor? Please enlighten us.
His point is they can and will use any dumb AZZ reason to deny a warranty claim. Nothing wrong with a larger tank for sure but......
How? How is a larger tank a factor? Please enlighten us.
Next thing you know the naysayers will claim “they’ll say it was “bad air.”” Everyone knows the fuel tank thing is a reach. A far reach. Not everything is doom and gloom, especially when it comes to these trucks.
Did you read the posts on the link provided?
From the original poster:
"Posted Sept 20th 2020.
Latest update - I heard from the service advisor at the Victorville dealership that the parts to repair the truck will not be available until December 15th.
Beyond frustrating."
I would not touch one of these CP4.2 equiped trucks with a 10 foot pole.
Another post from today in that same thread.
"Hello all. New here. I had almost an identical experience. Im now 2 weeks out from CP4 failure. Brand new 2020 3500 dually with only 7k miles. I have a case number with FCA but they have not responded in days. They told me they’d get me a 3500 rental but it hasnt materialized. I drove a 97 to almost 400k miles. I drove a 2011 to 200k miles. I was NEVER stranded on the side of the road all day waiting to be towed. Trailer towing in Phoenix was $225/hr. Customer care couldnt get me a truck tow either so I had to pay out of pocket. This absolutely insane. Even if they do get it fixed months from now I wont be able to ever trust the truck again. I really have no choice but to go find a used 4th gen truck or go to GM. If you are selling a 70k dollar product there just has to be accountability. The dealers dont want to be involved at all, they just push to fca customer care. Sounds like I need a lawyer."
HHmmm...could cost RAM/Cummins dearly. But how many failures on how many 2019-2020 trucks?
It is nonsens to make an elephant out of a mouse.
Right up to the point that it is your mouse that is broken!
That can happen with ANY vehicle that is on the market today.
Everything can and will fail, we explained it more then once that the manufacturer has a pre determined expected rate of fails for any given Component of the vehicle.
Although still a PITA if the truck is down for 30 days in almost any state they have to replace it. No need to get an attorney, just call FCA and document you want it replaced and it has been down 30 days. It's the law in almost every state, and the penalty for refusing your request can get quite large.
I do this stuff quite regularly (except for last 6 months) and at least in CA an attorney will drag it out for months or years to get a payday for themselves. Most could care less about you or your need for a truck.