I had the local dealer here in Virginia try blaming "red" on the cause of my lift pump & vp44 at 54K miles. The '01 3500 was towed in after it would not start. They changed the filter as this is the first protocol in diagnosis and discovered "red'. The service writer gave me the speech about off road fuel being dirty and unfiltered and this clogs the filters, Blah, Blah there by causing my truck not to start. They somehow got it restarted with the dying lift pump and thought all had been repaired with a $150 filter change and out the door I went.
48 hrs later the truck returned to the dealer on the roll off (3500's barely fit). I did take their diagnosis with a small grain of salt and refilled my next tank with the "good" fuel worrying that this "red" could possibly become a warranty issue.
I was actually impressed at how quickly DC covered the items, once the dealer requested their help on how to fix the vehicle. The dealer had spent 3-4 days speculating what might be wrong and was getting ready to drain my tank of the 35 gallons of "pink"as a fix.
DC covered the Carter and the Bosch vp44 without a problem, with no thanks to the service writer for trying his best to blame "red". I did however get nailed for a second $150 fuel filter not covered by warranty that falls under the pre-op diagnosis. I left feeling good that Cummins & DC took responsibility for their well documented symptomatic problem and did not try to blame "red".
As a little side note here in Virginia our Governors Raid the road funds for social programs. These road tax funds fall into their social payout programs that get them elected at the expense of road improvement. Sounds kind of like Social Security and the little "Lock Box" that Al Gore and George Busch argued over.
I do still keep 550 gallons of "red" around for my 7 gallon fill ups in my Kubota tractor.
*Disclaimer: This fuel is not intended for highway use... ... ... ... .
48 hrs later the truck returned to the dealer on the roll off (3500's barely fit). I did take their diagnosis with a small grain of salt and refilled my next tank with the "good" fuel worrying that this "red" could possibly become a warranty issue.
I was actually impressed at how quickly DC covered the items, once the dealer requested their help on how to fix the vehicle. The dealer had spent 3-4 days speculating what might be wrong and was getting ready to drain my tank of the 35 gallons of "pink"as a fix.
DC covered the Carter and the Bosch vp44 without a problem, with no thanks to the service writer for trying his best to blame "red". I did however get nailed for a second $150 fuel filter not covered by warranty that falls under the pre-op diagnosis. I left feeling good that Cummins & DC took responsibility for their well documented symptomatic problem and did not try to blame "red".
As a little side note here in Virginia our Governors Raid the road funds for social programs. These road tax funds fall into their social payout programs that get them elected at the expense of road improvement. Sounds kind of like Social Security and the little "Lock Box" that Al Gore and George Busch argued over.
I do still keep 550 gallons of "red" around for my 7 gallon fill ups in my Kubota tractor.
*Disclaimer: This fuel is not intended for highway use... ... ... ... .