Hey folks,
I haven't driven my 2001 6 speed ram but about 400 miles this winter. Yesterday, I drove across town (3 miles) and in my friends driveway (which the call a door yard here,
) I heard a pretty loud pop and the sound of steam wooshing out. I immediately though I blew a radiator hose. 
I popped the hood and took a look, and there was no blown hoses, no pools of coolant on the ground or a soaked engine compartment, none of the usual stuff. Then, as I was closing the hood, I saw a small pool of coolant on the bumper (passenger side) and noticed the metal line that connects to (I assume) the transmission cooler in front of the radiator and A/C condenser, had blown apart right at the flange where the cooler and the hard line connects. It is the upper one if I recall.
So, is there an easy bypass that will get me back on the road, as I do no towing. Easy as in, I was just diagnosed with a herniated lumbar disk yesterday, since my chiropractor was who I was going to see after picking something up at my friends house.
The next question is, what the sam hill is this all about? How can it deveolp that much pressure, and how do I trouble shoot and repair it?
Thanks for any help!
I haven't driven my 2001 6 speed ram but about 400 miles this winter. Yesterday, I drove across town (3 miles) and in my friends driveway (which the call a door yard here,


I popped the hood and took a look, and there was no blown hoses, no pools of coolant on the ground or a soaked engine compartment, none of the usual stuff. Then, as I was closing the hood, I saw a small pool of coolant on the bumper (passenger side) and noticed the metal line that connects to (I assume) the transmission cooler in front of the radiator and A/C condenser, had blown apart right at the flange where the cooler and the hard line connects. It is the upper one if I recall.
So, is there an easy bypass that will get me back on the road, as I do no towing. Easy as in, I was just diagnosed with a herniated lumbar disk yesterday, since my chiropractor was who I was going to see after picking something up at my friends house.
The next question is, what the sam hill is this all about? How can it deveolp that much pressure, and how do I trouble shoot and repair it?
Thanks for any help!