- Joined
- Apr 8, 2010
- Messages
- 345
- Age
- 33
- Vehicle Year
- 1991/2006
- Transmission
- Automatic
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I can't speak for the owner of this truck but my daily driver is a 2008 3500 cummins 6spd manual 4door long bed 4x4 drw. I drive it cause I can and like have a big truck to drive I get 16 to 20 mpg depending on how I drive it
Sure did. The only thing Dodge didn't do in a 3500 was an extended cab short bed.
Just seems like a colossal waste to me. To each their own.
This has been bugging me cause I really didn't think dodge ever made a single rear wheel 3500 in a 2nd gen body style. So I have been looking and I haven't found anything and I asked on a couple dodge forums and they are all saying its just rebadged and that there were no true 3500 single rear in a 2nd gen. This doesn't mean they are rite of course
whats the title say? what kind of economy does it get unladen?
This has been bugging me cause I really didn't think dodge ever made a single rear wheel 3500 in a 2nd gen body style. So I have been looking and I haven't found anything and I asked on a couple dodge forums and they are all saying its just rebadged and that there were no true 3500 single rear in a 2nd gen. This doesn't mean they are rite of course
Stacks are fine I just can't stand the fact that I can't hear what I'm thinking when I am rolling down the road with the passenger window down but then again I don't have a muffler on a IDI so that could be part of the problem (among others).
The truck is a true 3500 (1 ton). This particular truck wasn't a single rear tire truck factory. It had the bed swapped before I bought it. It was a dually and does have the dually spacers on it. The front end has spacers to bring the tires out to be aligned with the rears.
The truck gets a solid 17 MPG if I don't pay attention to how I drive it. Empty or loaded. I use it alot to pull trailers for hauling off scrap or delivering firewood.
I didn't install the stacks and was kind of unsure about them when I was looking at the truck, but it was about $3500 cheaper then the other ones I had looked and it was in better shape. The stacks do sound good and look pretty good rolling smoke out. I wouldn't install them in a truck myself, but I can live with them. I do drive a semi for work regularly and this isn't the same sound by anymeans, but it does sound pretty good.
So far, about 95% of the time I don't miss the bedspace the stacks take up considering I was used to a ranger bed before this it has alot of space.
If you have any other questions I will try to do my best to answer them.
The truck is a true 3500 (1 ton). This particular truck wasn't a single rear tire truck factory. It had the bed swapped before I bought it. It was a dually and does have the dually spacers on it. The front end has spacers to bring the tires out to be aligned with the rears.