You know that, and I believe you, but Dodge doesn't know that. They don't know you from some pimplefaced 16 year old playing FastAndTheFurious with your $50k truck.
Dodge shouldn't cover a clutch or brakes under warranty for some kid who doesn't know what they're doing, so why should they cover it for someone who they don't know?
Because it costs $50k, is supposed to be the most "durable" truck on the market, they make way more than 20% on these trucks, and they shouldn't build a POS and pass it off on the public, that's why. No, they don't know your driving habits, but with all the tattle-tales in the computer, it wouldn't be hard for a tech to look at it and see if it's been driven like it was stolen, or if it's been driven responsibly. Yes, there are a few that take advantage of the warranty, but most do not. Most are responsible for themselves and a truck that costs way more than it should. The manufacturer is the one being irresponsible, trying to pass an inferior product off on the public, using an established name and reputation. It is not uncommon to see an old 1st gen and many earlier 2nd gens with over 1/4 million miles on them and never touched except for maintanance. It is uncommon to see a 3rd gen do that. Between fuel lift pumps, computer ghosts, piston rings, DMFs, wheel bearings, and injector failures, very few trucks in the 3rd gen, as a percentage, make the cut. None of mine have. You can count that as emission requirements, technology advances, failure under higher power, or whatever the heck you want, but I count that as poor engineering. And people still keep buying them. The people that actually need them, can't make a living without them, and the people that keep driving the price up, don't care. And the people that keep bailing them out of a deserved bloody nose deserve to be whipped with a peppered cane pole. And the people that voted them in deserve what they get.
"The floggings will continue until morale improves... " or, "Don't worry, we'll print more!" :{