I have been reading about installing the H&S performance DPF delete kit with xrt tuner for the C&C on another forum. The reports are showing 3-5 MPG improvement with noticeable power gains. H&S clearly states these are for racing/off road use only and not street legal in any state. No inspection required in my neck of the woods. Looks like the complete kit with exhaust and tuner is about $1350. I figure if diesel goes to $3. 00 this thing could pay for itself in under 20,000 miles.
I would love to hear the pro's and cons from this group. Before I did anything, I would talk to my dealer to make sure they would not give me any issues over warranty as I only have 4500mi on the truck.
Mark,
I would go for it, bro'.
Contacting Us
I know all the guys at H&S (Casey, Dave, Bentley), and I can tell you that they are outstanding people, dedicated to these trucks and to customer support.
Casey, in particular, is a gem. He spends a lot of time, on-line, trouble-shooting trucks owned by guys who bought his competitors' tuners. How amazing is that?
I have done all the deletes, (EGR, EGR-cooler, and Complete exhaust system), and I have installed H&S's 5" stainless steel turbo-back exhaust system. Their downloader (tuner), the XRT, includes software than enables code-free operation of your truck with all this stuff removed.
I have 35,000 miles on my '07, and the past 15,000 with H&S's components on it. There is no comparison in how the truck runs/performs now, vs how it did beforehand.
I get 18 mpg in rural driving (sort of "semi-city," with plenty of stoplights), and I get 20 going 75 in the interstate. If I want to go 60, I can get 22 mpg, and that's with a loaded, 4x4 dually, running Rickson wheels and tires, plus heavy winch, winch bumper, Leer topper, etc, etc.
The coolest part of all, is that my oil stays cleaner, because I'm not recycling sludge and soot through the engine's intake.
All of the components that I removed are sitting on shelves, neatly catalogued, in my garage. It would take me one day (or $750 mechanic's labor) to restore the truck to "factory" condition, if and when my state "gos green," and requires diesel emissions testing.
I live in rural Colorado. I can see Denver implementing testing, but not the county area (farms, ranches) where I live. In fact, I called the county DOT, and they said, "It won't happen, here!" before I did anything to the truck.
Finally, on the dealer level, I wouldn't worry about them at all. They will work on your truck, and they will be happy to have your business. Chrysler is hurting, bad, and they just closed 800 dealerships, nationwide, yesterday.
I have to drive to Grand Junction, now, to get the prepaid oil changes I signed up for when I bought the truck; that's 340 miles, roundtrip, and the local dealer is delighted to have my business, even though my truck IS VERY heavily modified.
Life is short: Do what you want to with your truck and enjoy the hell out of it while you can. You can always put things back the way they were. Save the parts and keep them stored, neatly, in boxes. Meantime, drive your truck without all that crap on it, and save $ on fuel and aggravation.
Good luck!