Trooper4
Ram Guru
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2019
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- KITTITAS, Washington
Was not looking at percentages. The fact that some trucks/cars are great running, fuel efficient and trouble free in the mechanics, and other have poor mileage (even when driven carefully and in a fairly flat environment), have a lack of power, run rough and just seem to have mechanical issues (Hemi tic, etc), tells me that NOT every vehicle that comes off the assembly line has perfectly identical components. I grew up around a shop, and know for a fact that some cars are winners, and some cars are losers no matter the driver. Yes, a big factor is the nut that holds the wheel, but not the only one by any stretch. If you disassemble any engine and weigh the pistons and rods alone, you will find a variation (significant in some cases) in weights and size specs from machining and die differences. Any hot-roder knows that you don't just grab engine components from a bin, throw them in a performance engine, and expect to get maximum HP, torque and performance. You weigh and mic the parts and do a little metal removal to get the weights perfect, mic and weigh every moving part, and check the bore on every cylinder. I'm sure the factory that supplies our engines does that on every one.You also have to factor in that forums typically aren't representatives of the whole population of RAM owners. Most people who actually seek out vehicle forums are either enthusiast or trying to research problems and concerns.
So just by that, we are going to see a higher mixture of people with issues who comment on forums. How often would I say there is a trouble free truck vs a Lemon? That I cannot be sure. But being on several forums (E90, S197, RAM & Silverado), I have to say it's about the same across various manufacturers.
Then throw in the perfect electronics we get from China and a whole new set of factors crop up. No two identical vehicles are identical. Never.
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