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Woeful Deterioration of 1997 Dodge Plastic

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Mike Ellis

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I still have my '97 dually, drive it only occasionally but despite very careful maintenance and keeping it bone stock all these years, the interior plastics are failing at a rapid pace. This weekend I finally got fed up with the dash rattling and hunks of plastic falling out, so I started taking it apart and to my vast disgust just about every piece of plastic in the dash innards is as brittle and weak as a saltine cracker.

I'm dreading the idea of spending a couple of days in 100+ heat at a wrecking yard trying to disassemble a donor dash that will probably be just as brittle and weak. Have any of you folks found a decent aftermarket / OEM source of the lower parts of dash? I need the main part that supports the gauges, radio, air vents etc - not the top surface part (had that replaced some years back).
 
Depending on where you live, the plastics can dry out more quickly. Plastics will off-gas in the heat which is the smell you find when you get in a vehicle which has been parked in hot sun for awhile. The oils evap and then they get brittle. Where I live tends to be warm and dry and anything rubber I keep in the garage wont last long...
So park in the shade or the garage or use something to help keep those things from drying out.
 
Geno's was selling a dash that was made with MUCH more stout materials than the stock. I've heard nothing bad about them. I have trusted Geno's for most everything else. Just a suggestion.

Now, anyone have a line on the overhead console?? Mine fell apart and everytime I try to epoxy, more breaks off. Long gone Sally!

George
 
I have seen the Geno's upper dash, but not the lower part. I tried to patch the lower dash with epoxy and some wire mesh backing, but just like you when I touch it more breaks off. I finally gave up and went to the RV store and got some of that black Eternabond-style tape that is used for patching RV roofs and windows. I just patchwork taped the entire crumbling mess together, by the time I was done and ran long strips it looked better than I expected. Worked pretty good for a temporary fix.

Yeah it looks like something Jed Clampett and Jethro would do to their old truck, but at least I can stop worrying about having my throat cut by shards of shrapnel from the dash exploding some random spot every time I hit a bump. When the weather cools off it's time for a dash transplant... :mad:
 
but at least I can stop worrying about having my throat cut by shards of shrapnel from the dash exploding some random spot every time I hit a bump.
LMAO thanks I needed that
 
The tape worked far better than I had hoped, eliminated the horrible noises going over bumps and the constant cacophony of chattering squeaking squealing plastic. The miserably worthless cupholder / launcher assembly appears to have been a major source, should have removed it and set it on fire years ago. :mad::mad:
 
Hmm, first thing I bought from Geno's was the console cup/change holder. It works great and 22 years later, still works great!

Agree completely with the factory 'cup holder/launcher'! I'm a ham, and have a radio that separates with the radio behind the seat, and the control unit faceplate detaches to mount anywhere you can. I used double sided tape to secure it to the face of the cup holder, so for 22 years, it has pretty much been glued shut! MUCH safer that way. I normally forget it is even there.

George
 
I rugged up from new my 98.5 and never had a crack in the seven yrs I owned it.
I did the same with my 2007.
Our Honda Pilot's dash has been cooking in the sun since 2005,no rug. They must have spec'd it out with higher quality plastic.
 
I purchased the molded dash mat from Geno's. Looks really good and you can't hardly tell the dash is basically nonexistent. My dash carrier is also brittle and cracking. I will have my hands full if the evaporator goes out. The whole thing will likely crumble apart. I blocked off the heater core almost 10 years ago (Florida). I've had a couple long drives where it dipped into the 20's and 30's. My lips were blue. Lol!

I wish someone would make one.
 
It may help some. I need the plastic subframe that attaches to the metal frame. I also need the dash parts you posted.
 
You can find the dash top and bezel at quite a few places. The cup holder i guess at geno's. It's all the other parts you can't find like the glove box that's prone to cracking, the knee bolster etc.. What I do not understand is geno's is the most expensive for the bezel but i do not know the particulars of why.
 
Try EBay I purchased the lower dash from them. On the cup holder I welded a bracket which I attached to the metal dash core immediately behind the cup holder. The cup holder is now solid and no problem.
 
Don't need a toilet seat but a 2nd gen Dodge truck dash would be nice.
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I used the Genos top half dashboard. It is made of much better/heavier plastic than the original. Royal PIA to replace. I think I used every screwdriver I own. I had to replace top because I removed a large copperhead from my dash with a hatchet. It rattled a bit more on the trip home. Replacement was a pain but worth it.
 
I forgot to update the thread on the tape. I kept the tape fix on for a few months, but a cycle of cool weather followed by a hot fall day made the tape just give up the ghost -- it sagged and drooped away from the dash. Held up great during hot summer days but the temp cycle was too much for it I guess.

Trying to replace the tape was a cluster flugen because it would no longer stick to the dash plastic but was super sticky on my hands. Peeling it off broke off more plastic and by the time I was done it was beyond all hope and my hands were gumballs of tape residue. I finally gave up and paid a shop to find me one at a wrecking yard and replace it for me. They asked me why it had fist-shaped holes in it and I told them it was because I couldn't get a good angle for a kick.

By the time it was all said and done it cost me nearly $2 grand and much of my remaining sanity...:mad:
 
Hard to get over that Chrysler can't make any more of these things. Also hard to believe that some enterprising rascal with a 3D printer hasn't realized there's a heck of a market out there! Once you get the patterns, if you only make 10 a year, it's pretty easy money in the bank.

Sorry to hear about that, Mike! I have too much arthritis for that, everyone would be asking me where the .45 holes came from!

Oh well,

George
 
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