plainjaneFJC
Deplorable
TFL ran it up the toaster test twice, it passed the second time- most trucks have failed so far.I have heard rumblings they have had thermostat issues and are extremely sensitive to overheating...
TFL ran it up the toaster test twice, it passed the second time- most trucks have failed so far.I have heard rumblings they have had thermostat issues and are extremely sensitive to overheating...
I have heard rumblings they have had thermostat issues and are extremely sensitive to overheating...
Had they had the Hurricane out when I was truck shopping, I very much could have ended up in a Ram.TFL ran it up the toaster test twice, it passed the second time- most trucks have failed so far.
Well, I need to just spit that taste out, because I did it.I've got a bad taste in my mouth with our Jeep Cherokee Trail Hawk, when the light turns green it has to think about going, mpg isn't near what they claimed, had to replace a couple coils around 60,xxx miles and when it's time to change the oil it just shuts off leaving you stranded on the road for 15 minutes.
Wish I had my old Dodge Dakota, 318, 4x4 back again.
Hopefully the contemplated tariffs won't go into effect next year on imported vehicles as that will increase prices overall as competition is reduced for domestic brands. While Dodge/Jeep might clear out inventory, prices will go back to market rapidly.
I towed our 2010 Fleetwood Coleman Utah tent trailer with our old V6 Cherokee with the tow package. It wasn't fun and what led to me getting a pickup.Well, I need to just spit that taste out, because I did it.
The oil issue was fixed under a recall, it got decent mpg, just less under my heavy foot, and the coils?.....oh well.
Traded it in yesterday on a 2022 with 24,000 miles, loaded, heated seats, navigation, etc. with a V-6, it goes and can pull 4500 pounds, my travel trailer with water is 3200 pounds! No one knows we traded because it's a white Jeep Cherokee trail hawk, like the old one. The old one had 99850 miles on it, a 2017, the difference was 26200, I'd say that's a good deal.
Well, to me it's about time they stopped building a truck that came out 15 years ago... But to each their own.The bad news for Stellaris continues with todays announcement of a 2,500 worker layout.
This drop of automakers seems partly due to the discontinuation of the Classic Ram truck ...
"The Warren Truck Assembly Plant manufactures the Ram 1500 Classic, which is being discontinued after this model year, as well as the Jeep Wagoneer and Grand Wagoneer. Stellantis said the layoffs in Warren, first announced in August, will begin on Saturday. It added that they are the result of the end of production of the Ram Classic." (1)
But the total new layoff looks like it accounts for @ 5% of their workers!
"Stellantis, the parent company of Jeep, Chrysler and Ram, just laid off up to 2,500 autoworkers " (2)
One has to wonder what impact this will have on Jeep and truck model availability and prices🤔
(1) https://kansaspublicradio.org/npr-n...-ram-lays-off-more-than-1-000-detroit-workers
(2) https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/com...ousands-of-autoworkers-unemployed/ar-AA1skS3d
I have seen pics of widow stickers where dealerships were upcharging for cat etching on full-electric vehicles, of all things.Maybe part of the problem is dealers trying to pull this crap, lol
I have seen pics of widow stickers where dealerships were upcharging for cat etching on full-electric vehicles, of all things.
I feel conflicted about this whole topic - I needed at least a full size if not an HD recently for tow capacity in a big hurry and it ended up being a tossup between:
- F250's, of which there were basically only 95k+ trims and bare bones work trucks on the lots
- Ram 2500's, but again with awful selection despite the voluminous inventory
Basically none of the Ram dealers were willing to budge on MSRP - some even wanted upcharges over sticker. They were drowning in white work trucks with no fleet sales people working. Ford was offering pretty decent discounts, but it was just white XL's and there were zero crew cab short beds within 150+ miles.
Ended up snagging a RAM 2500 Tradseman w/ the Power Wagon package, cutting a check for MSRP 😑 . Only one on a lot in the state so between that and our time crunch, talking them down wasn't really practical. They did come out with a 15k upcharge for every BS addon under the sun, which we promptly rejected and didn't pay for. Not that I really care about free wheel locks or ceramic coat, etc.
I love the truck, Stellantis vibes aside; we have never owned a full size let alone a 3/4 ton. 6.4 gets me better gas mileage on the highway than my Frontier if I'm not towing. It hauls what I need to tow effortlessly (3-7k lbs). Payload is a couple hundred pounds higher than most of the actual Power Wagons because it is bare bones - it's like sitting in a U-haul rental. OEM brake controller and tow-haul mode is excellent. All I needed was Line-X, some Sumosprings in the back, and low profile step boards and we're good. The 10 year old Frontier will almost certainly get replaced by another newer one in a couple of years, but having this giant ass truck has really been life changing. We don't daily drive it but 2/3 of the 5000 miles on it has been pulling a trailer, and most of the rest has had the bed full.
Other notable aspect of it is that overall it's on the small side for an HD cab - not that we feel it coming from a midsize - and it fits in a normal parking space.
They do - they're just hard to find. Not as hard as the XL Offroad Package F-250's, though, or else I'd be driving a Ford.I don't think they do it anymore but I always loved the concept of a Tradesman Power Wagon.
They did in Canada for 2024. Not sure if they will for 2025. But, unless you just want the extra payload, price wise here, a Tradesman with the Power Wagon package is pretty close to a regular Power Wagon anyway. And, the regular Power Wagon will probably retain it's resale better.I don't think they do it anymore but I always loved the concept of a Tradesman Power Wagon.