I'm still looking! I see a really good Certified 2009 Dodge CTD long bed 4x4 for $22,000 with just over 100k miles. Really tempting after reading all the advice so far. Seems worth a try. Can I do a DPF minor delete where it looks all there? Seems like I could put a square plate with four bolt holes between the EGR pipe and the manifold and stop the recycle. True? Thanks again! Herb
Good luck finding a place selling a programmer to turn off the CEL's, limp mode, etc. the deletes will cause. The EPA has put a stop to most places that sold delete tuners. If you want a emissions deleted truck buy a pre-emmision truck. Save yourself the trouble of doing a delete because it isn't as easy as it used to be. You sure your area isn't going to implement emissions inspections? The 06 and older appear to be holding their value better than the early years of the 6.7. There is a reason for that.
Not one post covers the reduced MPG the DPF emissions cost you. Urea is just another cost and a PIA waiting for it to thaw, even with heaters, in cold weather. Pour a few gallons of diesel on the ground at each fill up. It is at least a reduction of 10% of your MPG. My experience with another brand of diesel truck towing 100% of the time anyway. I will second the fact that the DPF will plug unless you run it hard. The software changes for grocery getters burn more fuel to clean the DPF. Bottom line is the "emissions" cost you money from your bottom line and cause trouble. It is an extra part and has a specific life when everything goes well. When it doesn't you pay more to fix it.
Don't forget it was a voluntary trashing of Dodge and Cummins reputation to push 2010 emissions on their truck buyers "early" in 2007. The EPA didn't require them to go that far. Didn't learn from GM's LLY Duramax troubles and early EGR did they...
Another hidden gotcha in DPF equipped trucks: You may not be 'exempt' or able to avoid getting up to 5% Biodiesel at the pump. They don't label pumps at 5% or less in my state. Any amount of Biodiesel, an DOT/EPA approved road fuel, will wind up in your crankcase oil during post injection DPF regen. It doesn't evaporate back out like #2 diesel will. It doesn't show up as fuel in most oil analysis. It also makes the regen take longer as biodiesel is running down the cylinder instead of evaporating like #2 diesel does. Running B99 in a post injection emissions strangled engine is a good way to raise your oil level 2 quarts or more in 10K miles. Been there done that. Just like MTBE/ethanol in gasoline here comes biodiesel...
It is helpful to look at expected MPG from MPG reports of others, cost of diesel vs. gas, cost of maintenance, and your use of the truck. Maybe a gas truck would do the job for you esp since the 1/2 tons are getting 20-25 MPG now? Do you tow enough for that 6 MPG towing to offset the extra cost of going diesel? Does the extra cost of the emissions in fuel wasted, emissions delete cost, etc. justify a 6.7 truck over a 5.9 to you? So if fuel cost isn't a concern for you... then why not a gas truck?
Have you priced a converter and DPF for the truck you are looking at and made sure any warranties will cover it? Yes, very expensive to fix even with black market 'used' parts.
If you are not going to use a 6.7 hard (literally like you stole it!) it is best to get a gas truck or a pre-emission diesel. Otherwise you are running the emissions controls out of their design range.
Even run hard is no guarantee the emissions won't cause trouble. Run hard towing to delver tires and auto parts our broker had 1 Duramax DPF equipped truck always plugging the DPF while ours and others did not have issues. Many parts changed under warranty and never was fixed.