regularcab2500
Senior Member
killin my wood.. all this talk of steers and ****** is ruining my evening reading material.

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killin my wood.. all this talk of steers and ****** is ruining my evening reading material.

Dude it's the tone. And how hard you are pushing the topic.
Sent from the Rocket in my Pocket
I've owned a 05 ram 3500 dually 5.9L Cummins, a 2010 ram 2500 6.7L cummins fully deleted w/h&s mm. And now a 2015 2500 6.4L. Both cummins I used to tow my 16' work trailer and a 20' trailer w/mini excavator. other than the tongue weight you'd never know they were back there. I haven't had a chance to tow anything yet with this truck, but I expect it to struggle a bit when towing the mini excavator. Gas mileage, at this point not to impressed but it's winter and I've mainly been driving short trips, "city" driving (live in a small town). But I like spending around $50 to fill it up from around half a tank then $70+ for the same amount with a diesel.
My reasons for trading in the Cummins for a hemi where I don't tow alot anymore. Job trailer mainly but not much, mini excavator 3-4 times in the summer. The truck is my daily driver. And since 90% of my driving is less than a 10 mile round trip during the winter and depending on what I have going on in the summer maybe a bit more. I decided it wasn't worth the extra cost in fuel to keep the Cummins as a dd.
Sent from my D6708 using Tapatalk
Don't care which. Go with the 4.56 gear and "Smoke U'm All". LOL
As for the emissions I see nothing to gripe about
Dump in some Def from time to time and forget about it

one of so many possibilities
Of course ALL mechanical things break down. But the emissions systems on these 6.7s is flawed and problematic, it WILL clog up the turbo. EGR valve and DPF eventually. Its a ticking timebomb and I dont care who says otherwise, its gonna happen. And when it does, hang on to your wallet. When mine crapped itself the bill was a few bucks short of 7-grand.
Listen, Im not judging folks who want the 6.7, its an awesome diesel. Each to his own. But Im a realist about the crap theyve encumbered it with, thats all. Because it happened to me, and I aint gonna relive that again. Nope.
Until Mr. Limp Mode shows up unannounced and you, the wife and kids are on the side of the Interstate with the 5'ver and you watch as your vacation rig get towed off when you are 1000 miles from your house.
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Of course ALL mechanical things break down. But the emissions systems on these 6.7s is flawed and problematic, it WILL clog up the turbo. EGR valve and DPF eventually. Its a ticking timebomb and I dont care who says otherwise, its gonna happen. And when it does, hang on to your wallet. When mine crapped itself the bill was a few bucks short of 7-grand.
You had a pre-2013 truck did you not? The one without SCR and did not require DEF.
The reason why the EGR and DPF were clogged in the pre-2013 Cummins was because it did not have an SCR system. The EGR lowers combustion temps which creates more DPF clogging soot. The EGR was constantly working at extreme levels to lower NOx therefore clogging up the EGR and DPF.
With the inclusion of an SCR, that issue is completely eliminated. I have explained how and why earlier in this thread. The SCR system is the reason why you don't hear about the Ford Powerstrokes or GM Duramax's having EGR and DPF issues after 2011 when they introduced the SCR. The same goes for class 7 and 8 diesel trucks that I deal with on a constant basis. Before the inclusion of an SCR on the older Cummins ISXs and Caterpillar C15 engines, you could not keep an EGR valve or cooler on those things longer than 50,000 miles. After SCR, it dramatically reduced those issues making them a non issue.
The fix to the emissions system is here and has been used in class 7 and 8 vehicles for some time now with the SCR. Although some peoples ignorance to the SCR system and how it works makes them scared of it and therefore makes them hate it without even knowing anything about it. Like the old saying goes "People fear what they don't know".
Also, you will not immediately go into limp mode when a DEF fault is detected in the system. The system will let you go for another 250 miles after a DEF system fault is detected before going into de-rate mode limiting your speed. However, a simple disconnecting of the harness to the speed sensor behind the transmission will alleviate that issue, but you did not hear that from me.
You had a pre-2013 truck did you not? The one without SCR and did not require DEF.
The reason why the EGR and DPF were clogged in the pre-2013 Cummins was because it did not have an SCR system. The EGR lowers combustion temps which creates more DPF clogging soot. The EGR was constantly working at extreme levels to lower NOx therefore clogging up the EGR and DPF.
With the inclusion of an SCR, that issue is completely eliminated. I have explained how and why earlier in this thread. The SCR system is the reason why you don't hear about the Ford Powerstrokes or GM Duramax's having EGR and DPF issues after 2011 when they introduced the SCR. The same goes for class 7 and 8 diesel trucks that I deal with on a constant basis. Before the inclusion of an SCR on the older Cummins ISXs and Caterpillar C15 engines, you could not keep an EGR valve or cooler on those things longer than 50,000 miles. After SCR, it dramatically reduced those issues making them a non issue.
The fix to the emissions system is here and has been used in class 7 and 8 vehicles for some time now with the SCR. Although some peoples ignorance to the SCR system and how it works makes them scared of it and therefore makes them hate it without even knowing anything about it. Like the old saying goes "People fear what they don't know".
Also, you will not immediately go into limp mode when a DEF fault is detected in the system. The system will let you go for another 250 miles after a DEF system fault is detected before going into de-rate mode limiting your speed. However, a simple disconnecting of the harness to the speed sensor behind the transmission will alleviate that issue, but you did not hear that from me.
if the scr completly fixxed it then there would be zero suit made from the motor and black smoke would be a thing of the past... the diesels still produce suit.and that suit still gets sucked back into the intake via egr.
also when the truck runs out of def it will not go into limp mode as long as you don't shut it off once shirt off here comes limp mode.
So please forgive me if I dont buy anything that Chrysler/RAM says to sell yet another over priced experiment. I wont be a guinea pig for them again.
The 6.4L is a new engine with many unknowns is it not? So wouldn't that be another Chrysler/Ram experiment of being a guinea pig?
Although, this isn't Chrysler or Ram selling an experiment. SCRs have been used for years by many truck and engine manufacturers from class 1 all the way to class 8, and is proven that it works in eliminating the EGR and DPF issues. This is not just a Cummins thing either.