Free: Contests & Raffles.
We briefly looked at dodge diesels when shopping for a new truck. I couldn't get past seeing all the dodge trucks with dents and rippling down the top part of the beds. For those that don't know what I'm talking about, start looking at an angle lengthwise down the bed sides of all newer dodges that you see on the road. It's like they went super cheap with too thin of metal to hold up? The wife and I liked some things about them, but couldn't see spending that amount on something that dents up with normal use.
Cummins saved Dodge! Why would you own a mopar unless it is packing a Cummins?Garbage vehicles, great engine!
Quote from: Miles on August 18, 2016, 05:55:15 PMWe briefly looked at dodge diesels when shopping for a new truck. I couldn't get past seeing all the dodge trucks with dents and rippling down the top part of the beds. For those that don't know what I'm talking about, start looking at an angle lengthwise down the bed sides of all newer dodges that you see on the road. It's like they went super cheap with too thin of metal to hold up? The wife and I liked some things about them, but couldn't see spending that amount on something that dents up with normal use.This is an issue with all newer trucks. We've ran all 3 major brands and all of them dented if you sneezed too hard.
Who cares? Are you buying a truck or a minivan? Really I have dents. so what I work the heck out of it... Good truck, tough, reliable, economical, powerful! get some aftermarket bed rails and roll with it. Dodge will fall apart around the engine-promise. A good thing vs a 7000k engine...
And I'm not talking about construction or work rigs... I've got three dodge trucks on my street that are normal household use family rigs, and all are dented up only in that area. I can see it while driving by at 15mph.