The Dodge is far from perfect... ... ... but my Chevy's were far bigger money pits. :-laf
I don't really have a brand loyalty,but before I bought my Cummins,I always preferred the Chevy trucks. Built tough and simplistic in design and parts everywhere are available. I'm talking about the 70's trucks mostly but I've owned a few 80's , and 2 late 90's trucks also. The 1/2 ton 99' that I replaced with my Cummins 3 yrs was reliable but lacked the power and suspension I needed to tow a 6K trailer daily. Plus,I wanted a Cummins..... as SRath has stated,the Dodge is wrapped around it!
I have been in arguements with George and Harvey about this and don't wish to offend anyone. I have spent more money on this truck than any other vehicle I have EVER owned. The problems I have had are the same exact issues that everybody else have and I'm not going to get into that now.
The owners of 4x4 trucks all experience death wobble and poor steering and handling at one point or another... ... or will after their factory parts wear out in less than 100K miles. Then you can purchase the many aftermarket options to repair your truck... . also a very indication of a poor quality design from a manufacturer.
Alan
Alan, I believe if you did a survey, you'd find far more satisfied Dodge truck owners than not satisfied. You would also find far more trucks owners satisfied with their Dodge/Cummins then with Furd/Powerjoke and GM/Duracrap.
I realise you have had problems with your Dodge truck, but that's not to say everyone has problems with theirs. My 95 Dodge, after the 10 years and over 100K miles, was never in the shop, except for a wheel alignment. I replaced my own brake pads. My 05 has not yet been in the shop for anything.
george
I did miss that..... I always thought you had the 2 wheel drive trucks
I just went out and looked on the door... . much to my dismay... . my truck was manufactured in St. Louis.
Alan
It isn't assembly problems that plague these Dodge 4x4's. It is 100% pure corporate greed-driven design problems.
Of course you don't agree with that, Grizzly. You tend to be a santimonious cheerleader about all things Mopar. If anyone DARES criticize them, you immediately stop sending them fruitcakes at Christmas.
What did "assembly" have to do with "Death Wobble"? Explain that. Any of it. Like ****-poor trackbars and steering linkage that even Dumb Dodge recognized and changed?
What did mexico vs. St. Louie have to do with junk headlight switches and wiring and design that have literally burned many dodge trucks to the ground?
How did incompetent, overpaid English-speakers screw up the weak and short-lived headlights themselves?
How did foreigner assemblers taking American jobs make a difference in the parking brake design, and subsequent frequent failure, of early 2nd gens?
Get real. Bad design and bad parts are due strictly to corporate decisions that have NOTHING to do with who assembles them or where. The very fact there IS an assembly plant in "$4 per hour" mexico proves even YOU know what really motivates Dodge Corporation... And it is NOT "building the best truck possible". It is "Corporate PROFIT at any cost to consumers".
Seems those begging hat-in-hand, corporate welfare recipients screwed even THAT up, didn't they?
What trailer? I don't want a trailer. And I sure don't want two boat anchors dragging on my rearend. It would gain me nothing. If I had wanted, or needed, a dually I would have kept the one I sold when I went back to a SRW. Again, my truck came with the same springs, axles, and brakes your's did. It was custom-ordered with 3500 suspension and SRW by the guy I bought it from. He said he waited an extra 6 months for delivery because of that. I don't know why, it only needed the heavier springs (if those are even different) to be identical.