- Joined
- Dec 27, 2016
- Posts
- 134
- Reaction score
- 188
- Ram Year
- 2016
- Engine
- 392 Hemi
I do believe RAM CARES has been silent because they have totally run out of excuses. There are NO valid excuses for this diabolical SNAFU...
Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
Hi, GsRAM. Please know, FCA will not reimburse aftermarket parts. Any repairs done with aftermarket parts, will be out of pocket.
Kate
RamCares
And just for the humorist side of this, the survey I received was about my experience with a Customer Service Rep. that goes by the name of "Princess Mariel" and I am not joking!!
To the OP Bluederango - here is why you were denied. Your truck is a 2016 - read the notes. So while you were proactive, it is currently on your dime - at least until further notice.
It's clear as day right on the recall.
Read the actual recall procedure, it explains it all and what the actual problem was and the resolution - which includes a front end alignment before welding.
https://chrysler.oemdtc.com/1209/sa...-021-steering-linkage-2013-2017-ram-2500-3500
:
Safety Recall V06 / NHTSA 19V-021 Drag Link
NOTE: Added 2013 MY D2 vehicles to Remedy Available section.
NOTE: Only 2013, 2017 and 2018 MY vehicle remedies are available at this time. Part requests for 2014 through 2016 MY vehicles will be rejected until further notice.
SPECIAL NOTE: For 2014-2016 MY vehicles towed in and/or separation has occurred, a STAR Case must be submitted, then contact the STAR Center to request parts.
So sorry to inform you but I have the recall notice they sent me and the dealer has the truck listed as needing the recall,,
https://www.cvsa.org/wp-content/upl...019-02-Dodge-Ram-Drag-Link-Assembly-Welds.pdf
Doesnt show 2016 not affected, but what I find very interesting:
"While § 393.209 of the FMCSRs does not expressly prohibit welds on a drag link assembly, a weld on the drag link assembly may be cited as a violation under section § 396.3(a)(1) which requires all parts and accessories necessary for safe operation at all times.
Additionally, Item 10.c.(2) of the CVSA North American Standard Out-of-Service Criteria (OOSC) prohibits “any obvious welded repair(s)” of the front axle beam and all steering components other than the steering column (including hub) to include the drag link assembly."
So, basically, they know it might be in violation.
But somehow by the end of the document they basically say "welding is fine".
I hate to say it, but if someone gets hurt because of the issue, then maybe FCA will give a hoot. Or maybe not because its cheaper and easier to sweep under the rug on a case by case basis, instead of handing out free drag corrected parts to fix the issue correctly.
This explanation doesn’t hold water, either (concerning why some are reimbursed, and some aren’t). There are people who have gotten reimbursed covering all years 2013-2018. There are people who have gotten reimbursed for installing the synergy draglink- an aftermarket part that, according to @RamCares, “FCA will not reimburse”. I know of one member in particular that has a 2016, installed the synergy draglink, AND got reimbursed.To the OP Bluederango - here is why you were denied. Your truck is a 2016 - read the notes. So while you were proactive, it is currently on your dime - at least until further notice.
It's clear as day right on the recall.
Read the actual recall procedure, it explains it all and what the actual problem was and the resolution - which includes a front end alignment before welding.
https://chrysler.oemdtc.com/1209/sa...-021-steering-linkage-2013-2017-ram-2500-3500
:
Safety Recall V06 / NHTSA 19V-021 Drag Link
NOTE: Added 2013 MY D2 vehicles to Remedy Available section.
NOTE: Only 2013, 2017 and 2018 MY vehicle remedies are available at this time. Part requests for 2014 through 2016 MY vehicles will be rejected until further notice.
SPECIAL NOTE: For 2014-2016 MY vehicles towed in and/or separation has occurred, a STAR Case must be submitted, then contact the STAR Center to request parts.
This explanation doesn’t hold water, either (concerning why some are reimbursed, and some aren’t). There are people who have gotten reimbursed covering all years 2013-2018. There are people who have gotten reimbursed for installing the synergy draglink- an aftermarket part that, according to @RamCares, “FCA will not reimburse”. I know of one member in particular that has a 2016, installed the synergy draglink, AND got reimbursed.
They aren't welding to complete a "repair".
The welding is to ensure the nut cannot come loose, not welding to repair a part - pretty big difference between the two.
To the OP Bluederango - here is why you were denied. Your truck is a 2016 - read the notes. So while you were proactive, it is currently on your dime - at least until further notice.
It's clear as day right on the recall.
Read the actual recall procedure, it explains it all and what the actual problem was and the resolution - which includes a front end alignment before welding.
https://chrysler.oemdtc.com/1209/sa...-021-steering-linkage-2013-2017-ram-2500-3500
:
Safety Recall V06 / NHTSA 19V-021 Drag Link
NOTE: Added 2013 MY D2 vehicles to Remedy Available section.
NOTE: Only 2013, 2017 and 2018 MY vehicle remedies are available at this time. Part requests for 2014 through 2016 MY vehicles will be rejected until further notice.
SPECIAL NOTE: For 2014-2016 MY vehicles towed in and/or separation has occurred, a STAR Case must be submitted, then contact the STAR Center to request parts.
If thats the case, it is implying the weld is temporary. Because there IS and issue that needs to be fixed, permanently.
When this all started, FCA stated welding was a temporary fix until they could come up with a permanent one. Well, now they have a permanent one, so are they contacting everyone that already took the "temporary" fix?
I can't answer why some do and some don't reimbursed, maybe someone screwed up by reimbursing people who weren't entitled to it?
If the threads are ok, and thread depth engagement is ok, then why wouldn't a welded nut be a permanent fix??
It isn't the first time that a recall didn't need a part to complete the recalls.
When I worked at a dealer in the 80's and 90's, I also saw recalls where some cars got parts and others did not.
Usually there is an inspection (such as there is now), and if the part failed inspection then they get replaced, if the part did not fail inspection it was just torqued to spec or reassembled.
If I read the procedure correctly, there was an issue with the nut not being torqued to spec and damage to the parts as a result of a loose nut - could also have been some parts that were a bit too short and the thread depth engagement was out of spec.
However if neither of those were the case on a particular truck, the procedure is to reassemble torque to spec and weld the nut to the link to prevent loosening.
It appears as if people think that a recall implies that every vehicle included in the recall has a defective part on it and that is just not the case. Never has been the case.
One of the few places you do see that is with the airbags - I mean how can you inspect an airbag to see if it will inflate or not??
As far as the OP, if he still has the original drag link he may want to keep it OR if they expand the recall to actually include parts on the 14-16 model years he may get reimbursed - but not having the original part makes it much more unlikely.
The threads are the issue... So welding the nuts will prevent them from loosening, but if the threads aren't up to spec eventually they will gall, collapse and fail (inside the adjustment bar, unseen from the outside until it's too late)What "is" the issue?? If all the parts pass inspection and the procedure is completed, what is the issue - it is a permanent fix at that point
How can it fail?
The threads are the issue... So welding the nuts will prevent them from loosening, but if the threads aren't up to spec eventually they will gall, collapse and fail (inside the adjustment bar, unseen from the outside until it's too late)
The revised part goes back to old school with a squeeze type section to lock down on the shaft after adjustment.
Sent from my Pixel 3 XL using Tapatalk