2023 Chevy 3500 Dually 8' bed High Country Duramax is $82,425. I just saw the pricing this morning as they had a price increase.
Truck prices have gotten expensive. I can’t bring myself to shop used with the price so high. Have been looking at new Superduty trucks but learned the order book closed before Thanksgiving. Can’t get excited about Ram after my 2015 Powerwagon had transmission problems at 45k miles and service was horrible at Denver area dealers. What is the opinion on a new Chevy 2500HD with the Duramax and Allison 10 speed trans? I almost talked myself into an F150 with 3.5 ecoboost but think I’ll regret that truck when towing in the mountains.
I have a buddy who got a 22 powerstroke, club cab 4x4 platinum errythang 2 months ago and even with XPlan it was ~85k OTD. Damn. Got Damn. Glad my 17 1500 silverado is paid off soon. No more car payments for me. I'll keep this silverado and buy beaters for fun for the rest of my life.
We service all makes and fleets. Do not get a duramax for heavy work unless you want trouble; aluminum heads do not hold up. and the fuel pump issues. The cummins is a solid package, even the trans is good unless you modify or drive it really hard. We see them with 2-300 K on them with no issues. The max, we have replaced many engines on fleets that trailer heavy. The new ram is a solid truck.
Ford just notified me this week that my '22 F350 SRW 4x4 Crew Cab Platinum 160" WB 6.7 Power Stroke 10-Speed was finally getting shipped. Ordered the first week of Feb. It will easily be over $90k out of the door, with some dealer added options. Sucks that interest rates have increased like they have since Feb. I'll be moving some of my inventory to pay it off though.
This is my 2nd Duramax with the 10 speed Allison. I like it, not as abrupt shifts as the 6speed. You have to watch the tach to tell when it shifts most times. It must have proven itself as the first year had the torque limited in the first couple of gears and then they allowed 100% throttle last year I think it was and now they are upping the torque and horsepower on the motor in the 24 model year truck with no changes to the transmission. GM has two ten speeds out now so if you research them make sure you are reading about the Allison, the one on the gas motors has some issues.
I currently own a 2013 RAM 2500 with a Cummins. I have a 2023 RAM 2500 6.4L on order and hope to take delivery this month or next. The truck has been for the most part great, with the exception of a few emissions related items and the turbo actuator. If I lived in an area where I could delete the emissions crap I would. I really don't need a diesel, but pulling the bumper-pull RV is great. Paying $6 a gallon for diesel for everyday driving is absolutely not. For the amount of time I'm pulling the RV, which is probably less than 5% of the time, it is not worth it to me to pay a premium for diesel, plus DEF fluid! Another benefit is I will be able to buy gas anywhere. Not all stations carry diesel.
I have a lot of experience with Deaver, Carli, DR/Icon, and Kelderman. Leaf springs with a good reputation (like Deaver has) aren't magic, they spec a good quality steel. Spend the money, don't complain. ICON, Carli have always been good. Suspension should be something you buy once, so buy the good stuff. Get really good shocks no matter what, even on stock suspension. Both Fox and King have good valve stack recipes for normal trucks. If you are towing less than 20% of the mileage driven (like most people) get lower capacity springs, and make up the difference (+needed capacity) with helper bags. If it's an in bed camper 100% or a dedicated tow rig, have it weighed fully loaded and get that exact spring. But add bags anyway, you're gonna put too much crap back there eventually Kelderman was more of a industrial, plate steel, grade 5 coarse thread bolt, thing (this was 10 years ago). We spec'd and installed many kits on many trucks and I never liked the low ground clearance of the brackets, single shear suspension links, ride quality.... They were so massively overbuilt, I wouldn't expect them to break, but it's obvious the guy that 'engineered' it, was a farmer and nothing was ever tested for actual function. The auto-leveling system was a simple manual valve, common to semi-trailers, that would react to the suspensions extension on load (like towing up a hill) and slowly let all the air out of the bags. Once you got to the top of the hill and let off the gas, the truck would slam to the bumps, until the air could catch up... They had (have?) a short trailing arm style set up (not 4-link) that's instant center was so far off (and blatantly obvious to even a half-wit like me) the trucks would fully bottom on the bump stops on acceleration, then absolutely extend to max on braking One of ours was for SEMA that had to be trailered because no one was willing to drive it. No thanks. Maybe they're completely different now? I don't care enough to look. I'm sure theres more elegant solutions for air ride.
Not so good for towing. You deplete the battery much quicker and can't pull the entire rig and trailer through a Tesla charging station. Plus they have to build that ugly thing first.
Why do the Dodge faithful need to clarify it has a CUMMINS DIESEL? Is there any other option? When I see a "C" on the back window I can't help but to think...