inenemyterritory
Junior Member
Anyone have to replace their Clock Spring sometimes called a Clock Screw (Dealer called it that) on your Ram? I have always had GM trucks and still have them as my daily drivers. My mechanical knowledge comes from my grandpa who was a racer/mechanic at Portland Speedway so I was taught Powertrain rebuilds. Now I dabble with garage toys of my own. My Ram is what i use as my hauler. 17' 3500 HO Longhorn Deleted. Is this clockscrew even something I want to mess with? I am at that age (48) where if its not a bad repair I'll do it but if I have to torque my back inside the truck no thanks. I've turned into a baby. If I need to lay on a floor or topside creeper I'm good just give me a Cold Rainier. I hate taking it to a shop first because then I feel obligated to have them fix it. I suck at telling people NO! Never worked on a Clockscrew in my life and have never dug into this Ram or any Ram outside of the Deletes. GM makes good daily drivers and my HO sucks to daily drive. You throw 18k behind it and it's a Caddy. I think I let it sit too much to be honest. Short Question, take it to the mechanic or it's an easy job (as in not a back killer) fix it yourself. I can take the seat out too if that saves my back. I'm a GRATEFUL combat vet (Retired 2016) that is missing my pinky and middle finger on one hand and my index finger on the other (my two hands make one good one LOL!) followed up with 2 back fusions L3/L4-L4/L5. I struggle with real small fasteners in tight areas and my back feels good but not good enough to spend hours torqued under a steering wheel. At the same time I love fixing sht and problem solving it helps my mind stay distracted.