I was trying to help him. Use the truck for it’s intended purpose.
"Its intended purpose"?
I bought my 2022 used, from Carmax, with 35,813 miles on it. At about 37,200 miles, I got the "DPF full, see dealer" message.
DPF had to be replaced, and was (Ram covered it under warranty) BUT, it took over 30 days to get the new filter.
Since then I've been watching it closely. It has seemed to regen itself and have not even seen the "Keep Driving" message until last week.
When it showed up, I drove for about 20 minutes and it cleared.
My driving habits are, roughly, 1.25 hour round trip, highway miles each week. Two short trips to the gym, about 1 mile each way, each week. Occasional but other rare short trips during some weeks.
I was told that 2 hours of highway driving each week should be sufficient for it to keep itself clear.
I run Archoil in every tank full of fuel.
After it cleared itself, I parked it. Next trip was 1.25 hours, highway, and the DPF filter showed 12.5%. Next trip was 35 minute highway (to get tractor fuel) and 35 minutes highway back and the DPF showed 25% full.
Next trip was 1.25 hours, highway and the DPF filter shows 37.5% full.
I'm driven 33,378 miles since the last DPF filter was replaced (the first one had to be replaced at 37,200). This certainly doesn't seem like what anyone should expect.
Perhaps none of this is really a problem but, at this point, all I can do is watch and hope.
I've often wondered, however, if they are not meant for "short trips", what do the service trucks (plumbling, electrical, other contractors, etc) do? They are mostly around town and, I doubt, doing a couple of 1 hour trips on the highway each week.