Hello all,
Just picked up a 95 2500 ext. cab 4x4 complete with a small underhood fire.
The hood is buckled, right batt is melted, air box is ashes, wiring harness is toast, same with top of radiator shroud. Not as bad as it sounds- the turbo inlet elbow got it, but everything left of the turbo survived, the engine did well in this particular case which is why I bought it.
Now to the matter: The fire appears to have started at the junction box on the firewall on the right side. The previous owner parked it and one hour later this fire, electrical in nature started. Since this is my first Dodge, I see things that I like and others that I don't care for. Foremost in my decision to 'bring this one back' or just pull the engine and scrap the rest would be:
Are these trucks known for this sort of behaviour? Is this a recall issue that was not addressed or some electrical issue unique to this truck only? The previous owner tells me that the entire wiring harness under the dashboard had to be replaced some time ago due to melting caused by a mechanic using a fuse that was way too big for whatever circuit was overloading. Could this have anything to do with the underhood fire?
Thanks,
Dave
Just picked up a 95 2500 ext. cab 4x4 complete with a small underhood fire.
The hood is buckled, right batt is melted, air box is ashes, wiring harness is toast, same with top of radiator shroud. Not as bad as it sounds- the turbo inlet elbow got it, but everything left of the turbo survived, the engine did well in this particular case which is why I bought it.
Now to the matter: The fire appears to have started at the junction box on the firewall on the right side. The previous owner parked it and one hour later this fire, electrical in nature started. Since this is my first Dodge, I see things that I like and others that I don't care for. Foremost in my decision to 'bring this one back' or just pull the engine and scrap the rest would be:
Are these trucks known for this sort of behaviour? Is this a recall issue that was not addressed or some electrical issue unique to this truck only? The previous owner tells me that the entire wiring harness under the dashboard had to be replaced some time ago due to melting caused by a mechanic using a fuse that was way too big for whatever circuit was overloading. Could this have anything to do with the underhood fire?
Thanks,
Dave
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