I would like to find out as much as possible regarding breakdown on trucks that have higher miles. Reading the various comments in the forum it seems that I can expect trouble with the ball joints, but when?
What else is lurking out there.
Come to think of it there are a lot of owners that have not gotten to 100 k yet. For the benefit of these and new oweners buying used trucks with unknown or questionable mileage, it would be useful to include any repair that you can tie to an approximate mileage. Earlier I had offered a comment as to indication of mileage on a used truck other than the odometer which we know CAN be wrong. Prospective buyers would be well served with that information as well.
At about 250K on two of my trucks, the idler tensioner for the serpentine belt went out.
At about 360K the water pump locked up and burned the belt. Lots more expensive on the road than it would have been at home.
Twice (I am a slow learner) I ruined a front rotor by thinking the pads were still ok when they failed and left the rivets grinding into the rotor. This was probably caused also by some nut pulling out in front of me causing a hard stop. This can happen any time.
Stopped in Virginia to fuel up and shut off the engine. When I engaged the keystart, smoked filled the hood. The small wire taped onto the large wire that goes to the starter roasted itself and some other things. This was Sunday and 600$ later and the help of a very accomodating roll back operator, I was back on the road. I don't know to this day what went wrong. I kept the starter and had it check. Nothing wrong.
The diddly little spring clip that holds the emergency cable on the actuator inside the rear brake broke and the result was that I had little or no emergency brake. I have not found a dealer yet that can tell me where to get a new diddly little spring clip. I now have emergency brakes on only one wheel. This happend so long ago that I can't remember the mileage.
The first time that I worked on the rear brakes I realized that there was excessive loosness in the wheel bearings. I noted that the outer bearing race had eroded the axle nut and had "seated itself" into the nut allowing about 1/16 end play. The cause of this is no doubt the loads that I was carrying at the time. Probably too much. I installed the original bearings after carefull inspection and tightened the old nuts to spec. No more problem.
Everybody knows that you don't tow the Getrag. Right. But there are some tow truck drivers that don't give a rip.
The PCM on my 92 hasn't worked well since the first time the truck got rained on. Isn't the TPS. The PCM got worse everytime I got over 300 miles from home. Someone please put together an industrial controller that can replace the Dodge unit.
Jump in with anything you can think of. Im listening.
1stgen4evr
James
What else is lurking out there.
Come to think of it there are a lot of owners that have not gotten to 100 k yet. For the benefit of these and new oweners buying used trucks with unknown or questionable mileage, it would be useful to include any repair that you can tie to an approximate mileage. Earlier I had offered a comment as to indication of mileage on a used truck other than the odometer which we know CAN be wrong. Prospective buyers would be well served with that information as well.
At about 250K on two of my trucks, the idler tensioner for the serpentine belt went out.
At about 360K the water pump locked up and burned the belt. Lots more expensive on the road than it would have been at home.
Twice (I am a slow learner) I ruined a front rotor by thinking the pads were still ok when they failed and left the rivets grinding into the rotor. This was probably caused also by some nut pulling out in front of me causing a hard stop. This can happen any time.
Stopped in Virginia to fuel up and shut off the engine. When I engaged the keystart, smoked filled the hood. The small wire taped onto the large wire that goes to the starter roasted itself and some other things. This was Sunday and 600$ later and the help of a very accomodating roll back operator, I was back on the road. I don't know to this day what went wrong. I kept the starter and had it check. Nothing wrong.
The diddly little spring clip that holds the emergency cable on the actuator inside the rear brake broke and the result was that I had little or no emergency brake. I have not found a dealer yet that can tell me where to get a new diddly little spring clip. I now have emergency brakes on only one wheel. This happend so long ago that I can't remember the mileage.
The first time that I worked on the rear brakes I realized that there was excessive loosness in the wheel bearings. I noted that the outer bearing race had eroded the axle nut and had "seated itself" into the nut allowing about 1/16 end play. The cause of this is no doubt the loads that I was carrying at the time. Probably too much. I installed the original bearings after carefull inspection and tightened the old nuts to spec. No more problem.
Everybody knows that you don't tow the Getrag. Right. But there are some tow truck drivers that don't give a rip.
The PCM on my 92 hasn't worked well since the first time the truck got rained on. Isn't the TPS. The PCM got worse everytime I got over 300 miles from home. Someone please put together an industrial controller that can replace the Dodge unit.
Jump in with anything you can think of. Im listening.
1stgen4evr
James