This may be inappropriate to post here, but I think it is a very dangerous problem for early Ram owners, and you should check your trucks. Especially since it turns out, I'm not the only one to experience this. Kenny had a wreck because of it, I was just lucky.
On the way home from work last night, I approached a red light while coming off the Maine Turnpike spur road by the Maine Mall. As I came up to the light at Maine Mall Road, I stepped on the brake and the pedal went almost all the way to the floor! I quickly pumped the brake but it didn't make pressure. I found some pedal pressure about 3/4 of the way to the floor, as I was slamming the transmission into a lower gear. As a last resort I was going to jump on the parking brake, but it is hard to take your foot off the brakes as you are quickly rolling into a 6 lane wide intersection. There was enough braking to get me stopped in the middle of the intersection, and there wasn't any cars or trucks coming through the intersection. Fortunately, it was late enough at night. In the daytime, that intersection is non-stop busy.
The ABS light and the red 'Brake' light came on on the instrument cluster. It didn't take a rocket scientist to figure out, I had a hydraulic leak. Since I still had some brake pressure that would hold, I reasoned that I had one front brake working and one back. I think that is the way they arrange the brakes these days for this very reason.
This morning in the light, I was able to see that the metal brake line, along the frame and behind the fuel tank has rusted through. My Wife pushed on the brake pedal and there was a major leak. The whole left rear quarter of the undercarriage is soaked in fluid.
So, crawl under your trucks and check that area for rusty lines. If it has flaky rust, the line is compromised, and it won't tell you, but it will let you know. . . when you need them the most.
Love this engine, but I am seriously thinking about getting done with Dodge. Be careful folks.
Dennis
P. s. , Any guesses as to what I am going to be doing today, instead of going to work and earning money?




On the way home from work last night, I approached a red light while coming off the Maine Turnpike spur road by the Maine Mall. As I came up to the light at Maine Mall Road, I stepped on the brake and the pedal went almost all the way to the floor! I quickly pumped the brake but it didn't make pressure. I found some pedal pressure about 3/4 of the way to the floor, as I was slamming the transmission into a lower gear. As a last resort I was going to jump on the parking brake, but it is hard to take your foot off the brakes as you are quickly rolling into a 6 lane wide intersection. There was enough braking to get me stopped in the middle of the intersection, and there wasn't any cars or trucks coming through the intersection. Fortunately, it was late enough at night. In the daytime, that intersection is non-stop busy.
The ABS light and the red 'Brake' light came on on the instrument cluster. It didn't take a rocket scientist to figure out, I had a hydraulic leak. Since I still had some brake pressure that would hold, I reasoned that I had one front brake working and one back. I think that is the way they arrange the brakes these days for this very reason.
This morning in the light, I was able to see that the metal brake line, along the frame and behind the fuel tank has rusted through. My Wife pushed on the brake pedal and there was a major leak. The whole left rear quarter of the undercarriage is soaked in fluid.
So, crawl under your trucks and check that area for rusty lines. If it has flaky rust, the line is compromised, and it won't tell you, but it will let you know. . . when you need them the most.
Love this engine, but I am seriously thinking about getting done with Dodge. Be careful folks.
Dennis
P. s. , Any guesses as to what I am going to be doing today, instead of going to work and earning money?




