general problems of the 2010 Dodge Charger

Five problems related to suspension have been reported for the 2010 Dodge Charger. The most recently reported issues are listed below. Please also check out the statistics and reliability analysis of the 2010 Dodge Charger based on all problems reported for the 2010 Charger.

1 Suspension problem

Failure Date: 10/01/2015

Tl-the contact owns a 2010 Dodge Charger. The contact stated that the vehicle front end emitted a loud grinding noise while driving at low speed. The failure was experience numerous times. The vehicle was taken to the dealer several times for the failure. The dealer replaced the front struts and brake however, the failure was not corrected. The vehicle was taken back to the dealer replaced the water pump, and alternator causing the engine not to start up. The vehicle was taken an independent mechanic whom performed a diagnostic which located the failure at the engine timing chain. The engine timing chain was replaced. However, the failure was not corrected. The vehicle stalled while driving at 65mph. The vehicle was tow the dealer for further inspection. The manufacturer was notified. The approximate failure was 112,000. Li.

2 Suspension problem

Failure Date: 07/01/2014

The contact owns a 2010 Dodge Charger. While driving 20 mph, the vehicle drove over a bump extremely hard. The failure became progressively worse. The vehicle was taken to an independent mechanic where it was diagnosed, but the diagnosis was unknown. The vehicle was not repaired. The manufacturer was notified of the failure. The failure mileage was 99,000.

3 Suspension problem

Failure Date: 04/04/2013

While driving my 2010 Dodge Charger r/t I was stopped at stop light. When the light turned green I accelerated, immediately after I started accelerating a noise and clunking feel happened. I maintained a very slow speed because of not knowing what the issue was. I was able to pull into the first parking lot I could easily access. Again not knowing what the issue was but knowing that there was a different physical appearance to the rear of my vehicle and also how it drove while finding a parking location I had the vehicle towed to a trusted mechanic. Once on the lift we were able to see that the rear sub-frame bushings had completely separated from themselves. Being that I was going at a slow rate of speed the situation was kept under control, but had I been going at a higher rate of speed as I often do on my daily commute I am unsure if this would have turned out to be as controlled as it was. The impression my mechanic gave was that this was a catastrophic failure of a part that should not fail at this point of a vehicles life. After the initial assessment of the vehicle I did have it towed to a Chrysler dealership to do their assessment. I have also contact Chrysler multiple times and have been given little to no information on this particular issue other than that the engineers are looking at it. I did do some research and was able to find that other owners of the Dodge Charger, challenger and Chrysler 300 have had similar issues. Most of which were situations where owners replaced the bushings with stronger aftermarket parts prior to failure but it does seem to be a more common concern among owners. I know that I am just one person reporting an issue but my main concern currently is that at a higher rate of speed I do not know if the outcome would have been as controlled, and that is very concerning to me as I do have a family with small children.

4 Suspension problem

Failure Date: 04/02/2012

Takata recall. The contact owns a 2010 Dodge Charger. The contact stated that the vehicle made an abnormal noise that progressed numerous times each year. The vehicle was taken to the dealer where it was diagnosed that the rocker arm assembly needed to be replaced. The contact stated that the part had been replaced by the dealer several times, but the failure continued. The contact also received notification of NHTSA campaign numbers: 15v313000 (air bags) and 16v352000 (air bags). The dealer was unable to determine when the manufacturer would supply the parts for the two recall repairs. The failure mileage was not available. Parts distribution disconnect. VIN tool confirms parts not available.

5 Suspension problem

Failure Date: 09/09/2011

My experience is remarkably similar to the NHTSA complaint of 4/4/13. The rear isolators [bushings] snapped and the rear cradle assembly was replaced at 11,000 miles. I was traveling at a slow speed and completely lost power but was able to pull over to a parking lot. Car was not drivable and was flat-bedded to dealer. Rear isolator snapped without warning. No impact, accident, pot hole. Just snapped and the exhaust etc. Dropped. I was the only driver, so I know it was treated well. Dealer stripped undercarriage and replaced rear cradle assembly. Here's what the service invoice said, "found rear isolator snapped (no impact damage). Had to secure cradle before removal and drill out broken isolators. Replaced rear cradle assembly and swapped over parts as needed. " parts replaced included "crossmember / cradle / module, suspension, rear subframe, frame-rear axel. " since it was still under warranty, they didn't tell me the cost of the repair but the part alone was $2,900. Dealer and Dodge reps all said they had never heard of such a failure. I am thankful that the traffic that morning on my usual route caused me to resort to side streets. I am absolutely certain that if I was in traffic traveling 60 mph, I would not be here to file this complaint due to the sudden and abrupt mechanical failure. Contacted Dodge about buy back/replacement. No cooperation. Since then, the cylinder head failed. Twice. I will file a separate complaint.


Other Suspension related problems of the 2010 Dodge Charger



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