Table 1 shows two common other fuel system related problems of the 2002 Dodge Ram 3500.
| Problem Category | Number of Problems |
|---|---|
| Other Fuel System Fuel Injection System problems | |
| Other Fuel System Pump problems |
(1) I began having the infamous "dead pedal" syndrome about three months ago. Trying to pull out onto a freeway was especially dangerous when the dead pedal would happen. It would happen off and on, when you would least expect it. (2) the vp44 finally went dead on or about August 9th, 2007. The consequences were not having a ride to work, and having to borrow my neighbors truck for three days. (3) to correct the failure required getting a new vp44 pump to replace the old one, which cost me out of my pocket $1,600 out of my own pocket. Being that I am a active duty infantry officer in the united states marine corps, (currently stationed at new river air station, camp geiger, north carolina) and have been on three combat deployments in the last three years, I haven't that much money to spend. I have used my combat pay for paying for a wedding, house, and getting out of debt.
I own a 2002 Dodge Ram 3500 24v cummings diesel. I experienced a very serious engine failure my engine just turned off all its own. Apparently this is an well documented incident with this make and model. The failure is the lift pump, you will notice what a problem this is by going to any search engine with the search criteria of "Dodge + lift pump" there are a lot of stories just like mine posted all over internet bulletins hosted all over the country. Very serious issue considering these trucks are meant to carry heavy loads. I am convinced someone has already gotten hurt. There is a recall on the lift pump for the for 2000 it takes into account only a select few that were built in select plants within very specific dates. Not at all encompassing. Please see to it that this is followed up.