olyelr
Senior Member
Wtf are u talking about? Power has nothing to do with ground clearance?! No ****. Did somebody say it did?!Great, now your thinking...now use that same skill and see why power doesn't have anything to do with ground clearance
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Wtf are u talking about? Power has nothing to do with ground clearance?! No ****. Did somebody say it did?!Great, now your thinking...now use that same skill and see why power doesn't have anything to do with ground clearance
A power wagon wasnt built for towing and hauling heavy loads. It was built for offroading.
I havnt forgot about them.The original, when it was first named, was for both. As well as running equipment off a PTO.
Seems like folks are forgetting the Power Wagon name has been around for about 80 years now.
It was named for the 1940s trucks, not the more recent models that continue to wear the moniker.
i saw this exact truck on my local dealers lot and had no idea wtf i was looking at.someone on here said it wasn't a power wagon.In 2023 they introduced a Power Wagon Rebel 2500. You give up some of the off road capability in favor of towing capabilites. I have a 2024 that has a 2964 lb payload capacity, Rear Diff locker and winch. No sway bar disconnect though, and much stiffer Bilstien suspension. My window sticker lists it as Power Wagon but there is nothing on the truck stating power wagon just Rebel.
A power wagon wasnt built for towing and hauling heavy loads. It was built for offroading.
In which…it is much more “powerful” than a non-power wagon, for what it was built for.
Right there, you really don't see how ridiculous it is to say a vehicle with less payload is more powerful?Wtf are u talking about? Power has nothing to do with ground clearance?! No ****. Did somebody say it did?!
I havnt forgot about them.
But here, we are talking about the “moniker” trucks, not the 1940’s power wagons.
Im trying to shoehorn a new meaning? I simply was telling him the main differences that make a current power wagon a power wagon, compared to a normal hd ram.Then I don't understand why you're trying to shoehorn some new meaning for "power" to make it make sense. That's where the name came from, not some "power" of the modern trucks. Trademarks (and words in general) often outlive their original meaning. Hemi being another Chrysler/Dodge specific example. No need to try and redefine what a hemisphere is any more than try to redefine the word power or wagon. Just understand the historical significance of the name and the heritage the modern product is calling back to for marketing and brand awareness purposes.
Im trying to shoehorn a new meaning? I simply was telling him the main differences that make a current power wagon a power wagon, compared to a normal hd ram.
Im trying to shoehorn a new meaning?
In which…it is much more “powerful” than a non-power wagon, for what it was built for.
Dooood i just used “powerful” because the guy i was quoting wrote it. I essentially used it to say exactly what you did (more capable), i just quoted powerful because he did. He said it was less powerful because it has lower payload and such, i said it was more powerful for what it was intended for…offroading, not towing/hauling.Nobody would say a Rubicon is more "powerful" than a Sahara offroad. They would say it's more capable. So, yes.
I've already addressed the rest of it explaining the history to DIYMirage when he was talking about it being a misnomer. The "Power" is an anachronism as much as the "Wagon" is. We don't call them wagons any longer, aside from station wagons, either. No need to try and make the "Power" make sense in the modern context, either.
It's just a cool trademark tying it to it's history...maybe the "power" of marketing is the real power of a Power Wagon today?
That "Power Wagon Rebel" they printed on the window stickers makes it very confusing. If you look at the Ram.com website the Power Wagon and the Rebel are two completely separate trim packages. You can't get all the same options between them....meaning there are options available on the Rebel that you can't get on the Power Wagon, and vice versa. You can't get a "Power Wagon" package on a "Rebel", or "Rebel" package on a "Power Wagon".In 2023 they introduced a Power Wagon Rebel 2500. You give up some of the off road capability in favor of towing capabilites. I have a 2024 that has a 2964 lb payload capacity, Rear Diff locker and winch. No sway bar disconnect though, and much stiffer Bilstien suspension. My window sticker lists it as Power Wagon but there is nothing on the truck stating power wagon just Rebel.
I think they were going with the basic vehicle styling as being a "Power Wagon". It is definitely a hybrid between off road and towing. The Vehicle touch screen has pages for off road and pages for towing.That "Power Wagon Rebel" they printed on the window stickers makes it very confusing. If you look at the Ram.com website the Power Wagon and the Rebel are two completely separate trim packages. You can't get all the same options between them....meaning there are options available on the Rebel that you can't get on the Power Wagon, and vice versa. You can't get a "Power Wagon" package on a "Rebel", or "Rebel" package on a "Power Wagon".
Rebel has no front axle locker or swaybar disconnect. You can option in a winch but only with the 6.4 Hemi, it will not let you do a build with the winch and the Cummins. For the Power Wagon, there is no Cummins option, but the front locker and swaybar disconnect are standard. There are some other differences also, like the suspension
I think they were going with the basic vehicle styling as being a "Power Wagon". It is definitely a hybrid between off road and towing. The Vehicle touch screen has pages for off road and pages for towing.
The power wagon badge goes all the way back to ww2 I would say that is pretty good marketing to keep the brand alive true dodge fans recognize the brand. I was a Chevy fan until they went to ifs suspension. But I still recognize the brand from my younger days the tv show. Simon and simon had a cool pw on it

They need to bring back the Power Wagon Town Wagon!When I was in high-school 62-66 one of my girlfriends dad had one of the OLD Power Wagons. I don't know if it was one of the original military ones or the ones Dodge built post WWII. I was into cars back then and never asked him about it. He was a mechanic at a trucking company and drove it daily to work and back. It was the old body style with the wide flat fenders and the flat top of the cab and the straight up windshield. It was painted White with Red accents.
