Complaint 1753419
2000 DODGE RAM 2500 • SUSPENSION • incident Jun 18, 2021
- Complaint ID
- 1753419
- Make
- DODGE
- Model
- RAM 2500
- Model Year
- 2000
- Component
- SUSPENSION
- Incident Date
- Jun 18, 2021
- Date Received
- Jun 22, 2021
- Data As Of
- Jul 1, 2026
Complaint Summary
SUSPENSION
Owner Narrative
They Did Not INCLUDE THE 2000 Dodge Ram 2500 Yet I have had the same experience several times.When travelling at highway speeds and hitting a bump or pot-hole in the road, the front end begins to shake violently and does not stop until the driver jams on the brakes and brings the truck back down to below highway speeds. Some people contribute this phenomenon to the worst possible downside of having a coil-sprung front suspension on a truck with a track bar. Unlike a typical suspension set up, Dodge Ram trucks will continue to shake long after hitting the bump to the point that controlling the vehicle is nearly impossible until the driver slows down. The current lawsuit alleges that Chrysler learned about the death wobble defect with Dodge Ram trucks in the mid-2000s but waited four years before conducting a series of recalls from 2009 through 2013. Chrysler classified the recalls as Safety Recalls, H36, H46, K28, L16, N62, N49, and N63. The recalls addressed various parts of 2009-2012 Dodge Ram trucksâ steering linkage system, including its tie rod assemblies. The complaint alleges that the recalls excluded many affected vehicles and that Chrysler provided replacement parts that were also defective, forcing Chrysler to make additional recalls to remedy prior recalls. Consumers have reported that Chrysler does not have enough replacement parts to repair all the vehicles for which it has submitted recall notices and that drivers have been put on long waiting lists for repairs. Chryslerâs steering linkage defect and redesign. Allegedly, the ball stud is defective in the Chrysler Suspension design. The driverâs side tie-rod ball stud that Chrysler used is too weak to and is known to fracture under normal driving conditions. The tie rod is a âcrucial linkâ in the vehicleâs steering system. A loose tie rod can cause any vehicle to have an excess shimmy or the dreaded death wobble. The tie rod can affect front-end alignment. This happen several times in the last 15 years
Owner-submitted narrative on file with NHTSA. Complaint narratives are self-reported and have not been verified.
Related
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