I am a 20 year U.S. active duty veteran with a disability rating. I have owned Mopar products since January 2007 and have been a loyal fan of the brand ever since (2 Jeeps and this RAM). I’m proud of that loyalty—but I want to be clear; I expect fair treatment, accountability and ownership of failures.
Vehicle & Maintenance
2018 RAM 1500 Crew Cab 4WD, 3.6 Penstar with ~112,400 miles
Regularly serviced at required intervals; receipts available upon request
Purchase in spring 2020 at ~49k miles, no major issues other than:
A periodic/phantom EVAP style fuel vapor leak (brief CEL that clears)
Occasional fueling back pressure that prematurely shuts the pump nozzle
Recent Events (Just Before the Holidays)
Before Thanksgiving, I used 2 Lucas fuel treatment (correctly) across three tanks. CEL appeared (again), and parts store confirmed #2 cylinder misfire. I replaced spark plugs (they were due) and swapped coils (#2 ↔ #4) to isolate ignition coil to see if problem would replicate on right bank — light cleared and truck ran normally.
Drove Spring/Conroe → Corpus Christi and around town: no CEL.
Then CEL returned; take it to the auto parts store and it reads as #2 misfire; it cleared next morning by itself… weird
On return trip, I saw coolant temps up to ~235°F at my lunch stop (my normal is ~190–225°F) with the fan running hard. Stopped vehicle at restaurant and popped the hood.. smelled that sweet dreadful smell… coolant. Further investigation yields a split seam in the plastic. I take it to a shop and have it pressure tested and confirmed a split plastic seam on the radiator. Radiator was replaced by shop; engine ran to operating temp and system purged; drove home.
On Black Friday, temp again crept to ~235°F at idle; a second auto shop confirmed compression held and purged air; temp returned to ~190°F—but CEL returned.
Given the sequence of events, I suspected injectors and took the truck to the RAM dealer to confirm root cause.
Dealer Findings & Charges
Dealer charged $250 for diagnostics (Even after I already explicitly told them it was a #2 misfire on intake)..
After several hours, they report… #2 misfire…. Thanks Captain Obvious…
They then requested another ~$500 to pull the plenum/intake for additional testing.
I authorized a pressure test & leak down with borescope: coolant entering cylinder #2 was observed.
Dealer stated the head gasket “cannot be replaced” and that the truck requires a new engine ~$13,000 quoted.
I attempted to resolve this through private channels, however resolution could not be reached. Nor could I further escalate without reaching a rude representative at your call center (1-866-726-4636) which is unacceptable when your trying to resolve.
Thanks
@RamCares … just what everyone needs before Christmas…
A head gasket failure at ~112k miles on a well maintained Pentastar should not happen. There is no maintenance item I ignored or could have performed that would have prevented coolant intrusion into a cylinder. This points squarely to design/engineering—not neglect.
Being told that a head gasket is not serviceable and that the only path forward is a full engine replacement is an additional engineering/serviceability failure. If true,
this design choice imposes disproportionate cost on owners for a failure that should be repairable.
This is all unfolding right before the holidays. As a veteran, I should not have to fight this hard for a basic, reasonable remedy on a vehicle I’ve maintained and trusted.
Stand behind your product and make it right.
Receipts and service records are organized and ready to share along with full case number. So feel free to DM me
I have supported Mopar for nearly two decades. I am asking RAM/Mopar to stand behind this vehicle and do right by a veteran who has upheld his end of ownership. Please escalate and contact me to resolve this quickly and fairly.
Thank you,
Nathan Franklin — U.S. Veteran (20 years AD)
Mopar owner since 2007 | Houston–Spring/Conroe, TX