5.9l 12-valve Cummins rule!!! Okay, got that out of my system. . .
I just got my ol' '96 Dodge Ram 2500 w/368,250 mi. out of the shop last week. It's been sitting for many months because it had a leak in the fuel tank return line and I've been procrastinating about fixing it myself. Finally, I went to Autozone and bought two new Duralast Gold batteries and installed them. My old ones were 10 and 6 years old. When I hit the key to start the truck, it fired immediately. What an amazing engine!:thumbsup:
I took my truck to a local guy who specializes in Cummins Dodges and told him I wanted the leaky hose replaced, fuel filter/separater changed, transmission filter changed, and the valves adjusted. I also told him anything else he noticed should be fixed. He called to tell me that I had a power steering hose leaking and the alternator I replaced last year had the wrong pulley. It was a 7-groove and the serpetine belt is 8-groove. The belt was destroyed and the tensioner was also. In addition to the pulley, belt, and tensioner, he adjusted my idle up and recalibrated the TPS. When he took the pan off the transmission, one of the bolts was crossthreaded and he had to retap that and install a new fastener. He went back to an OEM gasket instead of the cork gasket that was installed at my last filter change. He said the OEM rubber gaskets were far superior for sealing than the cork. That should take care of my dripping transmission leak.
The bill for all of that? $870.96 I was more than happy to pay it.
Did I mention than I LOVE my old '96 180 hp 12-valve Cummins that gets a consistent 22 mpg and seems to just keep goin' and goin' and goin'...:cool2:
I know those new trucks are powerful and can really do some work. If you need that kind of power, you certainly will have fun shopping for new trucks.:thumbsup: Now, if we could just get a Ford with a Cummins . . .:cloud9: