After a hard pull, do not shutdown the engine until you have idled for about 3 minutes. Set the parking brake, hit the cruise control button and then the set button. The engine will increase the rpms to 1000 . Slow idle will load up the engine, washing the cylinder walls with fuel. Not cooling down the turbo will fry the oil in the turbo and fry the seals in the turbo causing eventual failure of the turbo?. 40 years of driving big rig.
That's good to know, I have had a few times pulling my rv up and down the hills of Tennessee and when I was done I let it idle for about 5 minutes and the temperature went up, so I thought I was doing it wrong. Next time I will let it idle at 1000 rpm. Thanks again.
Unfortunately, if your daily driving doesn't allow your engine to get up to normal operating temp, it will not initiate the required regens. So, whether you like to or not, you do need to take frequent "joyrides" in order for the DPF to regen. Better yet, use a different vehicle (gasser) for short trips. Unless I'm driving across town, I leave my truck at home and drive our Jeep instead. And as you stated, excessive idling will compound the problem. My 21 Powerstroke is no different in that respect, I monitor my DPF percentage and once it reaches 100%, it will attempt to regen providing my engine and exhaust temps are right. This is the time I'll put some music on and take a little cruise to allow it to clean. As for the Hotshots EDT, I also use it religiously on every fillup mainly because of my CP4. But it alone doesn't solve your regen issues. Our diesels are happiest when we're working them hard while towing, etc.
Cummins does recommend a diesel additive, Power Service diesel clean. My truck has never gone 1 mile without additives. I was doing UBER with my 2015 Ram 2500 mega cab (yes Uber) and I picked up a Cummins engineer and he told me to always use Stanadyne Performance Formula, he acknowledged that Cummins recommended (which he said is fine) another brand but said Stanadyne was better. He also told me to get a bypass oil filter. I now have a 2020 Ram 3500 Dually. The increase in fuel economy makes the additive free, I buy in bulk and with fuel prices over $4.
Just to add. Remove the DEF injector and inspect for crystals blocking the screen. Mine was completely blocked by crystals resulting in DPF full, reduced power, see dealer. I knew what happened, the question was why? Removed crystals with a small flat screwdriver exposing the injector screen. This allowed the DEF fluid to do its job. End of problem.
I have a 2021 Limited 3500 HO Mega Cab and I have put HotShot secrets EDT since the 2nd fill up of the truck. If I don't have the EDT with me, our local Kum n GO fuel station has extreme diesel with all the additives in the fuel. It definitely cost more but well worth it. I have 30k miles on the truck and I've never had an error code, I never let the truck idle for long periods of time, ever. Thanks for the video.
Good to know. I’m a new diesel owner and started using hot shots after reading lots of info in owners groups. I’m in the same boat as you with driving daily short trips and only towing the fifth wheel any one a month. Will be towing it for the first time this weekend and I’m really anxious to see the difference over my single rear wheel gas truck that I was using
So far I'm in the clear between adjusting my habits and using the hot shot stuff. Always a learning experience that's for sure. Really it's a minor nuisance in the end to get such a solid towing experience.
I started on a couple thousand kms to travel a couple days ago. Light came on about 100 kms out of town, I drive truck for a living so I am used to the lights coming on, and that's especially true when they are not on the highway. Anyways, light came on and I carried on with my trip, got to where I was going, and buddy cleared the code for me, luckily he was a engine builder that I was taking my 383 mopar engine too. That was about 800 kms into me trip, after cleared I drove all the way home and it hasn't come back on... I pretty much only use the truck for towing and travel so it was strange it came on, anyways, you are right our big trucks that are used in town always need regens, I run the highway and we never see our truck need a regen so this is something I know well... I have a little cheap ford escape for running around town and it has served me well 👍
I started running additives after the first time my truck through a code. I started erasing the codes. But they kept coming back until at 92,000 ish, I cleaned my EGR sensor and cooler. Haven't seen it since. I'm at 98,000 + now. I full time RV so I pull my 5th wheel all of the time and I also use it as a daily driver. Just not that often. Great video, thanks.
I Have a '23 3500 Maga cab with the HO 6.7 that I use for towing my 5th wheel also, and only have an 18 mile commute. I have since new, used 8oz of Cummins Approved Power Service Diesel Additive with Cetane Boost with every 30 gallon fill up. I own 5 Kenworth trucks as well and use the same product in those. Never a DPF issue in any of the trucks, even at 5 years old now.
I have a local company that cleans DPF filters. My mechanic took it off, I dropped it off at their shop and they cut it in 2, cleaned it and put it back together. They do an air test before and after for flow and it went from 60% to over 90%. You lose quite a bit of flow just getting air through it. It was $500 to clean and $500 to take off and reinstall. They recommend about 80,000 miles to do it again. They did say the filter is a bit too small for this size engine and expected work load.
Been using Hot shot secrets for 10 years never had an injector problem or fuel problem/when you change your oil, put the stick and eliminator in with it💪💪
If your Def usage starts going up clean your def injector. Its two 10 mm nuts to remove injector located on your exuast. White crystal buildup will mess with the spray pattern and is less efficient. Clean with warm water. Have the injector gasket available.
Please keep in mind that those big trucks that are idling, are mostly not owners of those rigs. They don’t care about the repairs. As a driver for 30 years, your tips are right in line. Well said.
Crappy Fuel and Low Cetane will kill this truck. Also, consider Archoil 9100 and 6200 for idling Propel HPR, 75 Syndiesel, 60 BP (Amoco branded), 51; Countrymark fuels Diesel-R, 50 Chevron, 49; or 51 with Techron D labels in select markets ConocoPhillips through the 76 stations (California) 47-53 Petro Canada, 47-51 BP (Powerblend 47, otherwise 40-42) Shell, 46; Sinclair, 46; Sunoco Gold, 45 (often +1-5). Sunoco regular is usually 40. Exxon/Mobile, 43-46 Holiday Stations, 40-43 HESS, 40-42, can be up to 45. Husky, 40 + diesel Max additives raise another 1-3 from there (41-45 max) Pilot/Love's/Flying J/Valero/Sheetz/Walmart/Wawa: 40
Your Idling is probably the number one factor. Using a good quality diesel adtivive like hot shots helps keep a consistent cetane level in the diesel not everywhere is top tier diesel.
I'm a diesel tech at an independent shop and I had 6 trucks in 1 week come in because of this exact code. I followed OEM repair instructions, and none of the steps helped find the problem. However those trucks have PCM software updates to fix this issue. I updated those trucks and 5 out of the 6 have not had the code set again, I'm currently stuck on 1 of the trucks still throwing the code after the PCM update.
Wow, great insight. I had heard a rumor about software update so good to know that it may have been more software than a real issue. Maybe an oversensitivity to some degree. Thank you for chiming in.
I have a diesel Rubicon and run a scan gauge 3 in the OBD2 reader and monitor soot mass percentage and can see if I’m in a passive or active regen. If you turn your vehicle off during an active regen soot can start building up and stay around for awhile. I use my mini tazer to force parked regens to clear everything out. I think you can do the same with a Jscan device.
I have this problem with my truck and its from the truck regening too often at one point it was regening on average every 160 miles. I tried to take it to the dealer they were no help. The fix I've found that is every oil change replace the air filter with oem air filter now I average a regen around every 1500 miles. I have around 200k miles on my 2023.
Great tip, thank you for sharing. I've also heard that some aftermarket air filters, particularly the oiled styles can throw false error there. Wow, 200K mi...that's some serious driving! :)
never ever let your truck idle more than 3-4 mins, cold start , press cruise and double press the set button, raising to 1100rpm has enough cylinder pressure to soot out....
I bought an Edge CTS3 to track my regen cycle and status. I use Hot Shots EDT every fill up and I notice less frequent regens while using it. 2020 Duramax.
I have a 2016 with HO Cummis with 93,000 miles on it. 180 Hrs of ideal time, i have only seen my truck go into regeneration mode two time that showed up on dash. couple of time when parking you could smell it had done something but still never show it was in regen. go thru 2 1/2 gallons of Def, about every 1,000 miles.
At the time of this video recording it was a super-cheap ($15) and generic bluetooth OBD II reader, but since then I've been using the Kingbolen stand alone unit featured in this video here: th-cam.com/video/KTpE6s-kfJY/w-d-xo.html It's way more feature-packed and much less finicky compared to the bluetooth connection. Hope this helps.
Also, not sure if you ever heard of the infamous grid heater bolt failure in our Cummins, but you might want to look into it. Banks has the solution and many other great products that should imho come standard. Banks is awesome.
I have a 2019 RAM Crew Cab LB HO Max. tow When towing, I use high idle if we are stopping for less than 10 minutes. I have switched between EDT and non, and I do see a difference, not in regards to maintenance but in regards to that 1 mpg. In my 100k miles I have never seen a P2459, and have only had one particulate sensor fail. for its 100k mile celebration it got the full hotshots secret treatment, with stiction eliminator in the oil, extreme diesel, and running 3oz EDT per tank rather than the 2oz for this oil interval. My truck only tows our fifth wheel, which is a mid profile 33ft at only 9k dry 11k loaded, But at the time I could not pass up the deal to get my truck, it was not selling due to RWD only so got a great price.
It's not about 'how often'...it's what 'type'. Hills? Long distance trips? You said it yourself, more pleasurable and safer with 17k, yes. The 6.4 gas dually is a dog uphill with 6 - 10 mpg.. tops. You made the right choice. Beautiful truck! Great content!
I let them change it, just to eliminate that as an issue. But since then I’ve had a battery drain and no start issue. I’m fairly confident that when they replaced the grid heater relay they put in a faulty one or the mechanic screwed up and the grid heater isn’t working.
On my 2020 2459 regen too often. Can’t drive 20 miles without clog filter needing regen. Dealer tried to tell me I used wrong oil, needed pcm update, and more bs. I finally found DPF Alternatives and they told me when my EGR cooler blew it coated the DPF with antifreeze causing it to clog with particulates and is now junk, must replace. Everything he said is basically true, but not always the real problem.
I have come to the conclusion these Cummins are just lemons. I have a 22 Cummins and I work it hard on the farm and also do plenty of short trips and I have nothing but issues...Its insane for the amount of money we spend these things should never have issues we need to pay out of pocket for. Gunna have to delete it it will cost me so much less than what I pay now every year in factory repairs.
idling is a dpf killer. also, make sure you pay attention to the regen cycles. if the regen starts (you can see if regen is occuring in the info screen), hit the highway and dont stop until the regen is complete.
My 2022 with 28,000 miles and I got same thing going on, but I just got message sent for two recalls with one being the Particulate Matter Sensor. I had frequent regeneration going on driving 50 min each way on highway and would not complete and when completing it's regen it would regen again when getting on highway. I even did a forced regen before changing my oil as I always do. I do have a scan tool with access to gateway to force regen my truck. I also been running Hot Shot Extreme LX4 once a month on fill ups and really can't tell anything different. in performance or mileage improvement. Only idle time I do is done few minutes before shutting off so oil in turbo can cool off a bit.
I had this issue. Dealer told me I was using the wrong air filter. Just did 750 miles towing after the air filter change and the code went away by itself and I started getting advertised MPG again. Got a filter straight from the dealer instead of online.
Yeah dealer told me the same. I had them put in stock filter and I got codes in 100 and 120 miles after... They always say use factory parts. I cannot say it helped.
My 2003 PSD F550 was a painful lesson. Not only did it stop me from owning a Ford but also owning a modern diesel. I have a pre-emission tractor which runs flawlessly though.
Got it all the time. I ignore it until I go for service. They do a manual re-gen. Change where you take fuel, wrong temp fuel cause a lot especially Sam's club dirty diesel
Howes seems to work well, especially when seasonal fuel is blended vs straight #1 or #2. Found better odds of finding non-blended fuel when filling at truck (pumps) in states where blended is available. Just replaced the fuel filter and water separator which showed discoloration vs previous changes where I fueled exclusively in a non-blended State more often. Also found my trucks run better, longer and more efficiently without the emissions… night and day difference, especially daily driving.
DELETE IT,IT WILL ONLY GET WORSE,ALSO GET RID OF EGR,SORRY BUT NEW TRUCKS ARE JUNK,2010 LAST GOOD YEAR,MINE DELETED 2012,CK ENG LITE HAS NOT COME ON IN 7 YEARS
Dropped my 22 2500 off today. 51k miles. Turbo and DPF being replaced/warrantied. I just dont understand what's going on with these trucks and the issues. DPF isn't new....whata the deal.
I get that code about once a week. I saw all of the horror stories online from other Ram owners going to a dealer to get it fixed so I just clear it and keep driving. Been working for about a year so I plan to continue doing it.
I've been using Hot Shots for the last couple of months and have had no change. I still get the error about every tank of fuel. I guess I'll continue just clearing it and ignoring it.
@stevenm652 Correct, FCA will not allow any connection to changing or clearing failures if not connected to Autoauth. I'd like to hear how he does it. I use a Solus Legend and I am connected to both the snap-on oem and FCA autoauth. Unless connected? I could see faults but not touch them
My 2018 Cummins 2500 is turning into a nightmare after the smog recall. Ram pretty much disabled my emmissions system. It now will not pass smog. 55,xxx miles on a bone stock unmolested well maintained truck!!!! Never again Ram.
Hey, I have the same truck you have and got the is code 2 days ago. I use fuel ox on every fuel up and do not idle it while park. I also use platinum DEF. I have 74k miles on the truck and I daily drive it just like you lol. I went to the dealer and they are refusing to delete te code unless I get an EGR DPF cleaning. The truck runs strong and no other codes or issues. I’m going to another dealer since I know this cleaning stuff is all BS and they just want money. Thank you for the video!
Idling is way worse than your 30 minute commute, assuming your commute is at highway speeds. I have a similar commute and have had zero issues. My 23 2500 has only actively regen'd on the 24 engine hour marks. That's 14K miles in. But I very rarely idle the truck (< 15% idle time). Also have never used additives in any of my trucks, except the rare occurrence of a winter trip from the southeast to the northeast during a time where we may not have switched over to winter blend yet down south. Agree with the other comments. If your 30 minute commute is at low speed, watch your DPF EVIC gauge, and don't shutdown during an active regen
Idling a modern diesel engines is killing the engine, prior to all the emission crap yes you could idle the engine without any issues. I have a 2017 Ram 2500 Megacab with the Cummins and I use Howes lube Diesel treat and Howes Lube Diesel Defender fuel additive
You’re getting better fuel mpg.because it’s not going into regen as often. When the truck does a regen it uses more fuel. Went through the same thing with my 2022. Fuel additives help with the situation and lessen the regens but if you Replace the maf sensor you wont need the fuel additives as frequently Granted I do still run fuel additives every 4th fill up. I can now go between 700 to 900 miles between regens if I drive empty daily around a 30 minute trip. If I’m hooked up to a trailer and towing I only see a regen when the computer commands the truck do one at every 24 hrs. The maf sensor in my truck was reading the wrong air temp and causing the truck to slightly over fuel itself thus making it plug the dpf sooner. And the fuel additives kinda helped mask the issue by making the fuel burn cleaner. Up until I replaced the maf sensor my truck never made it past 275 miles between regens. The error code p2459 is set to come on if the truck goes into regen 3 times back to back and the miles between each one of those regens are 150 miles or less
Given your opinion at the end of the video about gas versus diesel, I just bought a new fifth wheel that is 16,000 pounds when it’s fully loaded or the GVWR. We only plan on traveling with it 2 to 3 times a year and the rest of the time it will be parked. Do you think a diesel Dooley is absolutely necessary?
Do you happen to know the pin-weight on the fifth wheel either actual (from CAT scale) or manufacturer claimed pin-weight? If under 3K total when loaded/optioned fully, you probably can get away with single rear wheel (SRW) truck that has a payload/door sticker 3.7K min or higher. Some fifth wheel models/floorplans have unusually high pin-weights when loaded. For example my Jayco Pinnacle 37MDQS had an advertised pin-weight of about 3,200 lbs dry from Jayco. But, when optioned and fully loaded my actual pin-weight was 4,400 lbs and still within GVWR overall. So I absolutely needed a dually in my case due to the sheer pin-weight on the fifth wheel, though an SRW could pull it based on tow rating. Sometimes the advertised pin-weight on fifth wheels can go up 20-40% once optioned and loaded given the see-saw like configuration with a fifth wheel and truck. If you're not sure on loaded pin-weight for your specific model, sometimes groups on Facebook have fellow owners that share their sample weigh-ins from CAT scales to give you an idea. I'd say if you're anywhere close to 3K lbs pin-weight fully loaded/optioned you'll probably need a dually based on payload by the time you factor in hitch + passengers + tool box, etc. (~600-700 lbs allowance approximately). But, all that being said, if you're only towing short distances a few times a year and remaining stationary, that certainly can impact one's purchase decision ultimately. Hope this helps.
@@shawnl4756 very nice. I wonder if it's a calibration issue. Another tech commented that ram at least is considering a potential software update that may change the parameters that trigger that code.
I'm a dealer tech, we have been seeing p2459 alot. I have developed a process of troubleshooting them and having alot less trouble than the other diesel techs. I will say, the guys who don't drive them enough to complete a regen. Idle it for 3 hours, parking brake set, AC off. 2 hrs 15 mins into that idle itll go into regen.
I'd like think my P2459 was perhaps more due to my driving habits to blame and less on the DPF system itself. I could see where that's a tough sell as a tech to share with the customer though.
I will tell you a fellow tech also has been reached out to by an engineer and they think there is a calibration issue. I think they will release an update before long.
@@Hotshotveterani have seen sooted up coolers, usually the grid heater is sooted up and the exhaust pressure sensor tube. Those usualy cause a egr insufficient flow and underboost code. I do make sure those are clear when teouble shooting p2459.
I have a 2024 ram 3500 long bed dude at the dealership told me if I ever idle it put it in high idle, so hit cruise control then set and your good. I also short trip mine less than 5 miles one way to work. But on most weekends I tow a 36ft enclosed trailer. But what do you think on the high idle thing?
I've also heard recommendation for high idle if you have to do it. I did not know about how to set it though with the cruise control...thanks for sharing.
I had my def crystallize a while back. Dealer programmed it to not be so sensitive. I now fill up DEF in dried out gallon water jugs. When I use the DEF out of jug, then I get rid of container, and I don't reuse them. If you use a container over and over, it will crystallize.
After I started limiting idling and running the Hot Shot everyday additive, the issue went away. My understanding was that given my low mileage and shorter than ideal trips, the system really needed to be re-callibrated to allow for my less ideal driving habits and keep running to the regen instead of throwing that error. It basically would give up on the regen due to my shorter trips and then tell the system that the culprit was something in the DPF system rather than just my habits alone. I had heard that RAM was supposed to update the software, but that was through the grapevine.
@@AdventureRocks We had one check engine light. And now the truck is running automatic regeneration every 50 miles. Something is not right. We drive about 20 miles each way, mostly on the highway. Not much towing.
@@howardsherman9461 See if your code was the P2459...if so it could be same issue. It's like the callibration is off such that it throws a red flag if the regen isn't completed in X miles or hours as if something is wrong with the DPF system when in reality it is more the frequency/shortness of the trips. If you're able to do a long stretch to at least clear out the current regen that may be a temp fix. But for me it seemed like between the discontinuation of idling and the HotShot everyday at fill-ups...it caused DPF to regen less getting rid of it. I'm certainly no expert btw, so just sharing my experience. Hope that makes sense.
Wanted to give you an update on my DPF situation. After months of frequent regens.....the truck would auto-regen every 50-75 miles....I finally brought the truck to Dodge. They recommended me to change the fuel filters and air filter to mopar before they would do anything(even though I had just changed them all 2000 miles before). That did nothing to change the situation. After 2 more appointments, they finally agreed to replace the DPF filter. Even after that, I am still experiencing the same frequent regens. I have another appointment tomorrow and Dodge has assigned an advisor to my case. I will keep you updated.
I believe you made the right call with the diesel the gasser can get up to the same speeds but the peace of mind when braking in a diesel truck especially a ram is more than worth the price of the diesel towhaul mode and the exhaust brake on is amazing
Any more updates on your research,,,, I have the 23 ,,,2500 and just got the code twice just like you did,, ordered the hot shots,, but just wondering after 3 months if you seen any difference now.
Great question. Thanks for asking. I sold the truck recently (for other reasons), but between the hot shot additive (both the one time treatment and the smaller dose at each fillup) and limiting idling I never got the code again.
@@AdventureRocks Awesome,,, thanks,,, do you know of a code reader that will clear the code,, I have the blue driver reader but will not clear the main code
@@stevecox552 Did you try combinations with engine on, engine off...run position, but off, etc.? I found that mine was picky about it being in a certain mode. If I recall it wanted it to be on "run" with the engine off. If that makes sense? It was a cheap bluetooth code reader (old generic one).
I been having this problem for awhile I have 2019 ram 3500 the dealer changed a lot of parts egr cooler dpf 7th injector air filter turbo differential pressure sensor egr valve and the pcm
All the new diesel trucks do a passive regen cycle about every 800 miles for about 15 mins. Putting an Edge CTS monitor will show you when it’s doing this so you don’t shut your truck off mid cycle and start plugging the DPF!
Misinformation…. Passive regens are when you have the temps in the exhaust system hot enough to clear the dpf without notice. Active regens are every 24hr running time regardless of soot load in the DPF or when you have enough back pressure difference with soot load. Like your short trips, etc will trigger a active regen. It takes about 20 miles to clear out. You have a DPF guage on your +19 trucks. It will dispaly when in active regen. You can shut the truck off without any issues. It will pick back up when the truck gets to operating temps to complete. Additive is not needed.
I do not have anything heavy to tow yet- I do not let it idle- I run additives- I do not run it very far or long frequently so I’m nervous. I change oil 5w40 t6 once a year because of mileage but hard to find the best path to follow. Love my truck tho-19 2500 Cummins
@@blakewinchester5591 no sir- I never make any trips less than 10+ miles one way. I take it out on the highways as often as possible and mainly use it for towing 4atvs. So far so good!
instead of idle , turn cruise control on while park and dial down on cruise control , it stops the idle . I was told to do that , anyone have input on this ?
@@anthonyp6124 thank you. Yes, indeed, I sold it as we downsized significantly on the RV and no longer needed the dually. Here's my new ride: th-cam.com/video/t7rDx0RlJ1M/w-d-xo.html
@@AdventureRocks great choice. That’s where I was leaning. I had a 2020 Ram 2500 6.4 pulling a 11k 36’ 5ver. Wasn’t happy pulling in hills and mpg/ fuel range was terrible. Went to a 2021 Ram 3500 LB diesel and absolutely loved it. Air suspension in the rear and 50 gal tank. Didnt know the 5ver Was there. Joy to drive but unfortunately sold everything to move to FL. Now wanting to get back into Rving and not wanting to deal with diesel maintenance and fuel costs I feel the 3/4 ton gasser is the best overall with a taller rear gear for a DD and occasional towing. The 3.73 in the Ram 6.4 was a dog maybe if I had the 4.10 it would have been ok. Good luck with your new ride.
@@anthonyp6124 I hear you, a lot in common. I am really impressed with the GM L8T with 10-sp so far. I'll be releasing a 1st tow video in about 10 days. I'm not towing super heavy, just in the 5-6K range with a travel trailer, but RPMs are extremely low while towing...very similar to diesel surprisingly. Just a night and day difference compared to the last gasser I had, a 2015 5.7 Hemi 1/2 ton.
Yes, I think for me it was a combination of excessive idling and shorter hauls. Once I quit idling, combined with the Hotshot EDT, the code never came back. I also heard that RAM/Cummins may update the software to re-callibrate what throws the error code, so I think in reality it was being overly sensitive in some ways, but also I wasn't doing any favors with the shorter hauls and idling.
Your right these trucks don`t like it when you idle excessively, your spot on with your whole video. I wish that Ram would allow the driver to perform parked or forced regen`s manually just like the ford an Gm trucks do.
Great point, manual regen would be nice and solve a lot of problems. Short of using an aftermarket obd2 device at present, seems like RAM could easily add it into the infotainment/evic screens.
That's a good question. I am not sure, but I wonder if the manufacturer or community could weigh in for you. I only started using at about 20,000 mi on mine.
After a hard pull, do not shutdown the engine until you have idled for about 3 minutes. Set the parking brake, hit the cruise control button and then the set button. The engine will increase the rpms to 1000 . Slow idle will load up the engine, washing the cylinder walls with fuel. Not cooling down the turbo will fry the oil in the turbo and fry the seals in the turbo causing eventual failure of the turbo?. 40 years of driving big rig.
That's good to know, I have had a few times pulling my rv up and down the hills of Tennessee and when I was done I let it idle for about 5 minutes and the temperature went up, so I thought I was doing it wrong. Next time I will let it idle at 1000 rpm. Thanks again.
cylinder wash is not an issue on these newer trucks
I deleted mine. If you can. I recommend it. WAY better mpg.
So let it idle at 1000rpm for 3 minutes and then shutdown?
Unfortunately, if your daily driving doesn't allow your engine to get up to normal operating temp, it will not initiate the required regens. So, whether you like to or not, you do need to take frequent "joyrides" in order for the DPF to regen. Better yet, use a different vehicle (gasser) for short trips. Unless I'm driving across town, I leave my truck at home and drive our Jeep instead. And as you stated, excessive idling will compound the problem. My 21 Powerstroke is no different in that respect, I monitor my DPF percentage and once it reaches 100%, it will attempt to regen providing my engine and exhaust temps are right. This is the time I'll put some music on and take a little cruise to allow it to clean.
As for the Hotshots EDT, I also use it religiously on every fillup mainly because of my CP4. But it alone doesn't solve your regen issues. Our diesels are happiest when we're working them hard while towing, etc.
Cummins does recommend a diesel additive, Power Service diesel clean. My truck has never gone 1 mile without additives. I was doing UBER with my 2015 Ram 2500 mega cab (yes Uber) and I picked up a Cummins engineer and he told me to always use Stanadyne Performance Formula, he acknowledged that Cummins recommended (which he said is fine) another brand but said Stanadyne was better. He also told me to get a bypass oil filter. I now have a 2020 Ram 3500 Dually. The increase in fuel economy makes the additive free, I buy in bulk and with fuel prices over $4.
Good to know, thank you for sharing that helpful info.
Just to add. Remove the DEF injector and inspect for crystals blocking the screen. Mine was completely blocked by crystals resulting in DPF full, reduced power, see dealer. I knew what happened, the question was why? Removed crystals with a small flat screwdriver exposing the injector screen. This allowed the DEF fluid to do its job. End of problem.
Good to know, thank you for sharing that helpful info.
The def fluid has nothing to do with regen or the DPF so how would that fix this problem?
@@WoodyHayes614the def fluid cause the crystals to build up over time
@@emadibrahim7375 DEF fluid is injected after the DPF. It has nothing to do with regens or clogging the DPF.
I have a 2021 Limited 3500 HO Mega Cab and I have put HotShot secrets EDT since the 2nd fill up of the truck. If I don't have the EDT with me, our local Kum n GO fuel station has extreme diesel with all the additives in the fuel. It definitely cost more but well worth it. I have 30k miles on the truck and I've never had an error code, I never let the truck idle for long periods of time, ever. Thanks for the video.
Thank you for the tip!
You are correct, mine is deleted, so I can idle , like the older diesels
Good to know. I’m a new diesel owner and started using hot shots after reading lots of info in owners groups. I’m in the same boat as you with driving daily short trips and only towing the fifth wheel any one a month. Will be towing it for the first time this weekend and I’m really anxious to see the difference over my single rear wheel gas truck that I was using
So far I'm in the clear between adjusting my habits and using the hot shot stuff. Always a learning experience that's for sure. Really it's a minor nuisance in the end to get such a solid towing experience.
I started on a couple thousand kms to travel a couple days ago. Light came on about 100 kms out of town, I drive truck for a living so I am used to the lights coming on, and that's especially true when they are not on the highway. Anyways, light came on and I carried on with my trip, got to where I was going, and buddy cleared the code for me, luckily he was a engine builder that I was taking my 383 mopar engine too. That was about 800 kms into me trip, after cleared I drove all the way home and it hasn't come back on... I pretty much only use the truck for towing and travel so it was strange it came on, anyways, you are right our big trucks that are used in town always need regens, I run the highway and we never see our truck need a regen so this is something I know well... I have a little cheap ford escape for running around town and it has served me well 👍
I started running additives after the first time my truck through a code. I started erasing the codes. But they kept coming back until at 92,000 ish, I cleaned my EGR sensor and cooler. Haven't seen it since. I'm at 98,000 + now. I full time RV so I pull my 5th wheel all of the time and I also use it as a daily driver. Just not that often. Great video, thanks.
I Have a '23 3500 Maga cab with the HO 6.7 that I use for towing my 5th wheel also, and only have an 18 mile commute. I have since new, used 8oz of Cummins Approved Power Service Diesel Additive with Cetane Boost with every 30 gallon fill up. I own 5 Kenworth trucks as well and use the same product in those. Never a DPF issue in any of the trucks, even at 5 years old now.
I have a local company that cleans DPF filters. My mechanic took it off, I dropped it off at their shop and they cut it in 2, cleaned it and put it back together. They do an air test before and after for flow and it went from 60% to over 90%. You lose quite a bit of flow just getting air through it. It was $500 to clean and $500 to take off and reinstall. They recommend about 80,000 miles to do it again. They did say the filter is a bit too small for this size engine and expected work load.
I would just said get a decent small used car for those short trips. That’s actually what I am doing.
Deleted mine - and I run Archoil as an additive. Amazing results, thousands of miles with no problems and increased power and fuel economy.
Off road use only right.
@@goducgo no way man. Daily driver.
Not in my country
I kept my old 04.5 Dually Cummins for just such short trips. I would recommend a beater daily driver car for goofing around town.
Been using Hot shot secrets for 10 years never had an injector problem or fuel problem/when you change your oil, put the stick and eliminator in with it💪💪
If your Def usage starts going up clean your def injector. Its two 10 mm nuts to remove injector located on your exuast. White crystal buildup will mess with the spray pattern and is less efficient. Clean with warm water. Have the injector gasket available.
Thank you for the tip
This can be done on a 2022 3500 ?
Please keep in mind that those big trucks that are idling, are mostly not owners of those rigs. They don’t care about the repairs. As a driver for 30 years, your tips are right in line. Well said.
Great point, thank you
Crappy Fuel and Low Cetane will kill this truck. Also, consider Archoil 9100 and 6200 for idling
Propel HPR, 75
Syndiesel, 60
BP (Amoco branded), 51;
Countrymark fuels Diesel-R, 50
Chevron, 49; or 51 with Techron D labels in select markets
ConocoPhillips through the 76 stations (California) 47-53
Petro Canada, 47-51
BP (Powerblend 47, otherwise 40-42)
Shell, 46;
Sinclair, 46;
Sunoco Gold, 45 (often +1-5). Sunoco regular is usually 40.
Exxon/Mobile, 43-46
Holiday Stations, 40-43
HESS, 40-42, can be up to 45.
Husky, 40 + diesel Max additives raise another 1-3 from there (41-45 max)
Pilot/Love's/Flying J/Valero/Sheetz/Walmart/Wawa: 40
Your Idling is probably the number one factor. Using a good quality diesel adtivive like hot shots helps keep a consistent cetane level in the diesel not everywhere is top tier diesel.
Great point, thank you
I'm a diesel tech at an independent shop and I had 6 trucks in 1 week come in because of this exact code. I followed OEM repair instructions, and none of the steps helped find the problem. However those trucks have PCM software updates to fix this issue. I updated those trucks and 5 out of the 6 have not had the code set again, I'm currently stuck on 1 of the trucks still throwing the code after the PCM update.
Wow, great insight. I had heard a rumor about software update so good to know that it may have been more software than a real issue. Maybe an oversensitivity to some degree. Thank you for chiming in.
Isn't it stupid that you have to burn more fuel to save the planet lol
I have a diesel Rubicon and run a scan gauge 3 in the OBD2 reader and monitor soot mass percentage and can see if I’m in a passive or active regen. If you turn your vehicle off during an active regen soot can start building up and stay around for awhile. I use my mini tazer to force parked regens to clear everything out. I think you can do the same with a Jscan device.
Great tip, thank you
Use hot shot secret additives in your fuel and engine, best products on the market. Use blue def platinum too.
Thank you
I have this problem with my truck and its from the truck regening too often at one point it was regening on average every 160 miles. I tried to take it to the dealer they were no help. The fix I've found that is every oil change replace the air filter with oem air filter now I average a regen around every 1500 miles. I have around 200k miles on my 2023.
Great tip, thank you for sharing. I've also heard that some aftermarket air filters, particularly the oiled styles can throw false error there. Wow, 200K mi...that's some serious driving! :)
I replace all four filters every 7k and I’ve gotten that code a couple of times and it goes away but I get worried every time it comes back
Delete that crap and never worry again.
never ever let your truck idle more than 3-4 mins, cold start , press cruise and double press the set button, raising to 1100rpm has enough cylinder pressure to soot out....
You need to high idle your truck if you're going to let it sit running more than 10 minutes. I did it for hours a day and never had that problem..
Thank you for the tip!
I bought an Edge CTS3 to track my regen cycle and status. I use Hot Shots EDT every fill up and I notice less frequent regens while using it. 2020 Duramax.
Good to know, thank you for sharing that helpful info.
I have a 2016 with HO Cummis with 93,000 miles on it. 180 Hrs of ideal time, i have only seen my truck go into regeneration mode two time that showed up on dash. couple of time when parking you could smell it had done something but still never show it was in regen. go thru 2 1/2 gallons of Def, about every 1,000 miles.
Can you tell me what brand code reader you used on your Ram 3500?
At the time of this video recording it was a super-cheap ($15) and generic bluetooth OBD II reader, but since then I've been using the Kingbolen stand alone unit featured in this video here:
th-cam.com/video/KTpE6s-kfJY/w-d-xo.html
It's way more feature-packed and much less finicky compared to the bluetooth connection. Hope this helps.
Also, not sure if you ever heard of the infamous grid heater bolt failure in our Cummins, but you might want to look into it. Banks has the solution and many other great products that should imho come standard. Banks is awesome.
I have a 2019 RAM Crew Cab LB HO Max. tow When towing, I use high idle if we are stopping for less than 10 minutes. I have switched between EDT and non, and I do see a difference, not in regards to maintenance but in regards to that 1 mpg. In my 100k miles I have never seen a P2459, and have only had one particulate sensor fail. for its 100k mile celebration it got the full hotshots secret treatment, with stiction eliminator in the oil, extreme diesel, and running 3oz EDT per tank rather than the 2oz for this oil interval. My truck only tows our fifth wheel, which is a mid profile 33ft at only 9k dry 11k loaded, But at the time I could not pass up the deal to get my truck, it was not selling due to RWD only so got a great price.
Great tips, thank you. Sounds like a great truck.
It's not about 'how often'...it's what 'type'. Hills? Long distance trips? You said it yourself, more pleasurable and safer with 17k, yes. The 6.4 gas dually is a dog uphill with 6 - 10 mpg.. tops. You made the right choice. Beautiful truck! Great content!
Thank you!
My dealer told me I got that code because I put in an aftermarket air filter that had glue strips interfering with the air flow
Interesting. Heard the filter culprit from a few as well.
All BS. I had that and replaced on their suggestion, 2 fails within 120 miles between each regen. sigh....
I let them change it, just to eliminate that as an issue. But since then I’ve had a battery drain and no start issue. I’m fairly confident that when they replaced the grid heater relay they put in a faulty one or the mechanic screwed up and the grid heater isn’t working.
Mine told me the same
On my 2020 2459 regen too often. Can’t drive 20 miles without clog filter needing regen. Dealer tried to tell me I used wrong oil, needed pcm update, and more bs. I finally found DPF Alternatives and they told me when my EGR cooler blew it coated the DPF with antifreeze causing it to clog with particulates and is now junk, must replace. Everything he said is basically true, but not always the real problem.
I have come to the conclusion these Cummins are just lemons. I have a 22 Cummins and I work it hard on the farm and also do plenty of short trips and I have nothing but issues...Its insane for the amount of money we spend these things should never have issues we need to pay out of pocket for. Gunna have to delete it it will cost me so much less than what I pay now every year in factory repairs.
I hear you. The DPF is frustrating for sure. I got tired of it to the extent I went back to a gasser.
idling is a dpf killer. also, make sure you pay attention to the regen cycles. if the regen starts (you can see if regen is occuring in the info screen), hit the highway and dont stop until the regen is complete.
Thank you for the tip!
diesel has become such a needy girlfriend anymore- its ridiculous.
yeah - late for dinner, and then what about low fuel... so needy....
That's what we have going on. That's exactly what the dealer did, cost me a freaking diesel injector. I replaced it and now this code pops on.
My 2022 with 28,000 miles and I got same thing going on, but I just got message sent for two recalls with one being the Particulate Matter Sensor. I had frequent regeneration going on driving 50 min each way on highway and would not complete and when completing it's regen it would regen again when getting on highway. I even did a forced regen before changing my oil as I always do. I do have a scan tool with access to gateway to force regen my truck. I also been running Hot Shot Extreme LX4 once a month on fill ups and really can't tell anything different. in performance or mileage improvement. Only idle time I do is done few minutes before shutting off so oil in turbo can cool off a bit.
I had this issue. Dealer told me I was using the wrong air filter. Just did 750 miles towing after the air filter change and the code went away by itself and I started getting advertised MPG again. Got a filter straight from the dealer instead of online.
Interesting, thanks for sharing that helpful info.
I been using Docs Diesel for a long time and haven’t had issues with it
Yeah dealer told me the same. I had them put in stock filter and I got codes in 100 and 120 miles after... They always say use factory parts. I cannot say it helped.
DELTETE IT!!!
My 2003 PSD F550 was a painful lesson. Not only did it stop me from owning a Ford but also owning a modern diesel. I have a pre-emission tractor which runs flawlessly though.
that is definitely that way to go !
A cheap Bosch OBD 1000 will scan and clear the P2459 code.
Best of luck anyone who’s got the frequent regen issue.
Got it all the time. I ignore it until I go for service. They do a manual re-gen. Change where you take fuel, wrong temp fuel cause a lot especially Sam's club dirty diesel
If I lived there I wouldn’t care. Beautiful.
Howes seems to work well, especially when seasonal fuel is blended vs straight #1 or #2. Found better odds of finding non-blended fuel when filling at truck (pumps) in states where blended is available.
Just replaced the fuel filter and water separator which showed discoloration vs previous changes where I fueled exclusively in a non-blended State more often.
Also found my trucks run better, longer and more efficiently without the emissions… night and day difference, especially daily driving.
DELETE IT,IT WILL ONLY GET WORSE,ALSO GET RID OF EGR,SORRY BUT NEW TRUCKS ARE JUNK,2010 LAST GOOD YEAR,MINE DELETED 2012,CK ENG LITE HAS NOT COME ON IN 7 YEARS
Dropped my 22 2500 off today. 51k miles. Turbo and DPF being replaced/warrantied. I just dont understand what's going on with these trucks and the issues. DPF isn't new....whata the deal.
I hear you. DPF is a huge letdown, especially when it acts up.
I get that code about once a week. I saw all of the horror stories online from other Ram owners going to a dealer to get it fixed so I just clear it and keep driving. Been working for about a year so I plan to continue doing it.
Good to know. So far I've been code free now for about 1500 miles after making my adjustments and using additives.
I've been using Hot Shots for the last couple of months and have had no change. I still get the error about every tank of fuel. I guess I'll continue just clearing it and ignoring it.
@@ChuckShradertry blue def platinum and only use that. It'll help too. And the hot shot secret additives are awesome.
What scanner do you use to clear it?
@stevenm652 Correct, FCA will not allow any connection to changing or clearing failures if not connected to Autoauth. I'd like to hear how he does it. I use a Solus Legend and I am connected to both the snap-on oem and FCA autoauth. Unless connected? I could see faults but not touch them
My 2018 Cummins 2500 is turning into a nightmare after the smog recall. Ram pretty much disabled my emmissions system. It now will not pass smog. 55,xxx miles on a bone stock unmolested well maintained truck!!!! Never again Ram.
Sorry to hear. That's frustrating for sure.
2024 Lincoln is coming out with GPF(gas version),so we’re doomed.
Hey, I have the same truck you have and got the is code 2 days ago. I use fuel ox on every fuel up and do not idle it while park. I also use platinum DEF. I have 74k miles on the truck and I daily drive it just like you lol. I went to the dealer and they are refusing to delete te code unless I get an EGR DPF cleaning. The truck runs strong and no other codes or issues. I’m going to another dealer since I know this cleaning stuff is all BS and they just want money. Thank you for the video!
Thank you!
Idling is way worse than your 30 minute commute, assuming your commute is at highway speeds. I have a similar commute and have had zero issues. My 23 2500 has only actively regen'd on the 24 engine hour marks. That's 14K miles in. But I very rarely idle the truck (< 15% idle time). Also have never used additives in any of my trucks, except the rare occurrence of a winter trip from the southeast to the northeast during a time where we may not have switched over to winter blend yet down south. Agree with the other comments. If your 30 minute commute is at low speed, watch your DPF EVIC gauge, and don't shutdown during an active regen
Great points. Thank you for sharing.
Idling a modern diesel engines is killing the engine, prior to all the emission crap yes you could idle the engine without any issues.
I have a 2017 Ram 2500
Megacab with the Cummins and
I use Howes lube Diesel treat and Howes Lube Diesel Defender fuel additive
Great tip, thank you
You’re getting better fuel mpg.because it’s not going into regen as often. When the truck does a regen it uses more fuel. Went through the same thing with my 2022. Fuel additives help with the situation and lessen the regens but if you Replace the maf sensor you wont need the fuel additives as frequently Granted I do still run fuel additives every 4th fill up. I can now go between 700 to 900 miles between regens if I drive empty daily around a 30 minute trip. If I’m hooked up to a trailer and towing I only see a regen when the computer commands the truck do one at every 24 hrs. The maf sensor in my truck was reading the wrong air temp and causing the truck to slightly over fuel itself thus making it plug the dpf sooner. And the fuel additives kinda helped mask the issue by making the fuel burn cleaner. Up until I replaced the maf sensor my truck never made it past 275 miles between regens. The error code p2459 is set to come on if the truck goes into regen 3 times back to back and the miles between each one of those regens are 150 miles or less
Great tips, thank you
It might cost a few bucks but try to find a copy of the service manual online. The manual for my box truck is 6000 pages and covers everything.
Great tip, thank you
Given your opinion at the end of the video about gas versus diesel, I just bought a new fifth wheel that is 16,000 pounds when it’s fully loaded or the GVWR. We only plan on traveling with it 2 to 3 times a year and the rest of the time it will be parked. Do you think a diesel Dooley is absolutely necessary?
Do you happen to know the pin-weight on the fifth wheel either actual (from CAT scale) or manufacturer claimed pin-weight? If under 3K total when loaded/optioned fully, you probably can get away with single rear wheel (SRW) truck that has a payload/door sticker 3.7K min or higher. Some fifth wheel models/floorplans have unusually high pin-weights when loaded. For example my Jayco Pinnacle 37MDQS had an advertised pin-weight of about 3,200 lbs dry from Jayco. But, when optioned and fully loaded my actual pin-weight was 4,400 lbs and still within GVWR overall. So I absolutely needed a dually in my case due to the sheer pin-weight on the fifth wheel, though an SRW could pull it based on tow rating. Sometimes the advertised pin-weight on fifth wheels can go up 20-40% once optioned and loaded given the see-saw like configuration with a fifth wheel and truck. If you're not sure on loaded pin-weight for your specific model, sometimes groups on Facebook have fellow owners that share their sample weigh-ins from CAT scales to give you an idea. I'd say if you're anywhere close to 3K lbs pin-weight fully loaded/optioned you'll probably need a dually based on payload by the time you factor in hitch + passengers + tool box, etc. (~600-700 lbs allowance approximately). But, all that being said, if you're only towing short distances a few times a year and remaining stationary, that certainly can impact one's purchase decision ultimately. Hope this helps.
I got this on my 2020 Duramax and also a P2002 code dealer wants to replace the DPF filter
Thank you for sharing/tip.
@@AdventureRocks so I got a scanner reset all DPF codes and ran a service regen, CEL went off and hasn’t come back on
@@shawnl4756 very nice. I wonder if it's a calibration issue. Another tech commented that ram at least is considering a potential software update that may change the parameters that trigger that code.
I'm a dealer tech, we have been seeing p2459 alot. I have developed a process of troubleshooting them and having alot less trouble than the other diesel techs. I will say, the guys who don't drive them enough to complete a regen. Idle it for 3 hours, parking brake set, AC off. 2 hrs 15 mins into that idle itll go into regen.
Thank you for the helpful tip!
I'd like think my P2459 was perhaps more due to my driving habits to blame and less on the DPF system itself. I could see where that's a tough sell as a tech to share with the customer though.
I can debate this as I am a hotshot trucker. I’m getting this error code but I think it was because my EGR cooler was bad and let soot into the DPF
I will tell you a fellow tech also has been reached out to by an engineer and they think there is a calibration issue. I think they will release an update before long.
@@Hotshotveterani have seen sooted up coolers, usually the grid heater is sooted up and the exhaust pressure sensor tube. Those usualy cause a egr insufficient flow and underboost code. I do make sure those are clear when teouble shooting p2459.
I have a 2024 ram 3500 long bed dude at the dealership told me if I ever idle it put it in high idle, so hit cruise control then set and your good. I also short trip mine less than 5 miles one way to work. But on most weekends I tow a 36ft enclosed trailer. But what do you think on the high idle thing?
I've also heard recommendation for high idle if you have to do it. I did not know about how to set it though with the cruise control...thanks for sharing.
I had my def crystallize a while back. Dealer programmed it to not be so sensitive. I now fill up DEF in dried out gallon water jugs. When I use the DEF out of jug, then I get rid of container, and I don't reuse them. If you use a container over and over, it will crystallize.
Great tip, thank you
Have you had any other with your DPF system? I have been having very similar issues.
After I started limiting idling and running the Hot Shot everyday additive, the issue went away. My understanding was that given my low mileage and shorter than ideal trips, the system really needed to be re-callibrated to allow for my less ideal driving habits and keep running to the regen instead of throwing that error. It basically would give up on the regen due to my shorter trips and then tell the system that the culprit was something in the DPF system rather than just my habits alone. I had heard that RAM was supposed to update the software, but that was through the grapevine.
@@AdventureRocks We had one check engine light. And now the truck is running automatic regeneration every 50 miles. Something is not right. We drive about 20 miles each way, mostly on the highway. Not much towing.
@@howardsherman9461 See if your code was the P2459...if so it could be same issue. It's like the callibration is off such that it throws a red flag if the regen isn't completed in X miles or hours as if something is wrong with the DPF system when in reality it is more the frequency/shortness of the trips. If you're able to do a long stretch to at least clear out the current regen that may be a temp fix. But for me it seemed like between the discontinuation of idling and the HotShot everyday at fill-ups...it caused DPF to regen less getting rid of it. I'm certainly no expert btw, so just sharing my experience. Hope that makes sense.
Wanted to give you an update on my DPF situation. After months of frequent regens.....the truck would auto-regen every 50-75 miles....I finally brought the truck to Dodge. They recommended me to change the fuel filters and air filter to mopar before they would do anything(even though I had just changed them all 2000 miles before). That did nothing to change the situation. After 2 more appointments, they finally agreed to replace the DPF filter. Even after that, I am still experiencing the same frequent regens. I have another appointment tomorrow and Dodge has assigned an advisor to my case. I will keep you updated.
@@howardsherman9461 Dang, that's frustrating. It's the cat and mouse game that is most frustrating with these DPF issues.
Delete all that junk off your truck!
Right!!!?
You got money, buy a Toyota to drive around town
I believe you made the right call with the diesel the gasser can get up to the same speeds but the peace of mind when braking in a diesel truck especially a ram is more than worth the price of the diesel towhaul mode and the exhaust brake on is amazing
Thank you. Appreciate the comment
Get a edge cts3 you can do a manual regin.
Any more updates on your research,,,, I have the 23 ,,,2500 and just got the code twice just like you did,, ordered the hot shots,, but just wondering after 3 months if you seen any difference now.
Great question. Thanks for asking. I sold the truck recently (for other reasons), but between the hot shot additive (both the one time treatment and the smaller dose at each fillup) and limiting idling I never got the code again.
@@AdventureRocks Awesome,,, thanks,,, do you know of a code reader that will clear the code,, I have the blue driver reader but will not clear the main code
@@stevecox552 Did you try combinations with engine on, engine off...run position, but off, etc.? I found that mine was picky about it being in a certain mode. If I recall it wanted it to be on "run" with the engine off. If that makes sense? It was a cheap bluetooth code reader (old generic one).
I been having this problem for awhile I have 2019 ram 3500 the dealer changed a lot of parts egr cooler dpf 7th injector air filter turbo differential pressure sensor egr valve and the pcm
Thank you for sharing. Hopefully they can get to the bottom of it for you.
Did anything fix it?
No it goes off and come on once or twice a month
All the new diesel trucks do a passive regen cycle about every 800 miles for about 15 mins. Putting an Edge CTS monitor will show you when it’s doing this so you don’t shut your truck off mid cycle and start plugging the DPF!
Thank you for the tip!
Misinformation…. Passive regens are when you have the temps in the exhaust system hot enough to clear the dpf without notice. Active regens are every 24hr running time regardless of soot load in the DPF or when you have enough back pressure difference with soot load. Like your short trips, etc will trigger a active regen. It takes about 20 miles to clear out. You have a DPF guage on your +19 trucks. It will dispaly when in active regen. You can shut the truck off without any issues. It will pick back up when the truck gets to operating temps to complete. Additive is not needed.
@@Mill72 thank you for the correction
I do not have anything heavy to tow yet- I do not let it idle- I run additives- I do not run it very far or long frequently so I’m nervous. I change oil 5w40 t6 once a year because of mileage but hard to find the best path to follow. Love my truck tho-19 2500 Cummins
Have you experienced any issues yet with your frequent shorter trips?
@@blakewinchester5591 no sir- I never make any trips less than 10+ miles one way. I take it out on the highways as often as possible and mainly use it for towing 4atvs. So far so good!
@@elgroucho7563good deal, thanks for the reply!
How's it working now?
instead of idle , turn cruise control on while park and dial down on cruise control , it stops the idle . I was told to do that , anyone have input on this ?
I've heard a few others suggest that, but I actually sold this truck so no longer have the option to test that procedure.
@@AdventureRocks no longer towing or just went with a gasser?
@@anthonyp6124 thank you. Yes, indeed, I sold it as we downsized significantly on the RV and no longer needed the dually. Here's my new ride:
th-cam.com/video/t7rDx0RlJ1M/w-d-xo.html
@@AdventureRocks great choice. That’s where I was leaning. I had a 2020 Ram 2500 6.4 pulling a 11k 36’ 5ver. Wasn’t happy pulling in hills and mpg/ fuel range was terrible. Went to a 2021 Ram 3500 LB diesel and absolutely loved it. Air suspension in the rear and 50 gal tank. Didnt know the 5ver Was there. Joy to drive but unfortunately sold everything to move to FL. Now wanting to get back into Rving and not wanting to deal with diesel maintenance and fuel costs I feel the 3/4 ton gasser is the best overall with a taller rear gear for a DD and occasional towing. The 3.73 in the Ram 6.4 was a dog maybe if I had the 4.10 it would have been ok. Good luck with your new ride.
@@anthonyp6124 I hear you, a lot in common. I am really impressed with the GM L8T with 10-sp so far. I'll be releasing a 1st tow video in about 10 days. I'm not towing super heavy, just in the 5-6K range with a travel trailer, but RPMs are extremely low while towing...very similar to diesel surprisingly. Just a night and day difference compared to the last gasser I had, a 2015 5.7 Hemi 1/2 ton.
Get a better diagnosis reader and force regen at home
Great tip, thank you
You are correct about the failure, so delete it!
Too bad we can't go back in time before 2008, pre-def right?
Man that's a nice truck by the way.
Thank you
Ram might bring back the v10
I'm in!
Did that fix it?
Yes, I think for me it was a combination of excessive idling and shorter hauls. Once I quit idling, combined with the Hotshot EDT, the code never came back. I also heard that RAM/Cummins may update the software to re-callibrate what throws the error code, so I think in reality it was being overly sensitive in some ways, but also I wasn't doing any favors with the shorter hauls and idling.
Your right these trucks don`t like it when you idle excessively, your spot on with your whole video. I wish that Ram would allow the driver to perform parked or forced regen`s manually just like the ford an Gm trucks do.
Great point, manual regen would be nice and solve a lot of problems. Short of using an aftermarket obd2 device at present, seems like RAM could easily add it into the infotainment/evic screens.
Question: is it oaky to put EDT NEW truck?
That's a good question. I am not sure, but I wonder if the manufacturer or community could weigh in for you. I only started using at about 20,000 mi on mine.
Thanks
@@AdventureRocks