OLEJOE
Well-Known Member
Mine also.Yea its too bad RAM didn't see fit for all the extra garbage to go the way of my connected services from the factory ... Non existent.
Mine also.Yea its too bad RAM didn't see fit for all the extra garbage to go the way of my connected services from the factory ... Non existent.
Your DPF should be clean as a whistle running the Archoil and towing. The Archoil must have cleaned my whole system out good too. I’ve noticed my e brake doesn’t have any lag in it whatsoever. Im currently running the first tank of the every tank additive after running the cleaner. 678 miles and 17 hours since the last regen and gauge has been on zero the whole time.friday i changed my fuel filters and then ran up north with a trailer and F150 in tow and went into my 24hr regen. on the way back filled the tank and used a bottle of the archoil cleaner. ran through 3/4's of a tank and my dpf gauge still show's 0% View attachment 74616View attachment 74617
I have a 2019 2500 with the 6.7. We have been having the issue with it going into regen every 100-200 miles since they changed out the fuel pump early last year. Its been in the shop at least 3 times now and for 7 weeks just on the current occurrence. I've been going round and round with the service people, dealer (who is trying to sell me a new truck) and FCA customer service to get this thing fixed. I got a letter from FCA that says they have extended the warranty on the emissions components to 10 yrs and 120,000 miles. Dont know if my complaining had anything to do with it or not but I'm waiting to hear back from FCA customer service about the current status of repairs. I could take back my truck and drive it like it is but I can't drive an extra 10 to 60+ miles every 100-200 miles to clear the regens. And if you think about it, every excessive regen wears down that additional mileage warranty. I'm not very happy right now.I know this has been beat to death but I can’t find a good answer to this other than “drive it harder”. I have a 2022 Ram 2500 with a Cummins (not high output) at roughly 8500 miles I got the regen too often code and my mileage dropped from roughly 17 average to 14, took it to the dealer and they said I need to drive it harder. At this point my towing miles were at 2,000 miles so I’m towing 9k lbs 25% of the time. I know that’s not a lot.
At 9,00 miles (500 miles later) my mpg is down to 12.6 and I get another regents too often code. Back to the dealer and they tell me ”you need to drive it harder” they do the manual regen and send me on my way.
Now I start tracking my auto regen from the dpf screen, I leave the dealer still in auto regen, put 363 miles on the truck at highway speeds up and down canyons, auto regen finally shuts off…. For 22 miles, truck goes back into auto regen, I have 263 miles since then and the truck is still in auto regen. That 263 miles is me flooring it from every stop light and averaging roughly 90mph on the Highway, hitting 102 at times which apparently is the top speed for the truck. Around 150 miles into this regen I hooked a 4k lbs trailer to the truck and started just driving around with that trailer connected to try and get it out of regen. Mileage is still at 12.8ish.
Called the dealer last night and they said all they can do is put it in manual regen in the parking lot. They tell me they have one other person with this problem and that it’s my driving habits. At this point I’m calling BS, I have about 20 diesel trucks in my parking lot at work, most these guys live within 20 miles of this place and pretty much all of them still have brand new hitches on their trucks, all of them that I talk to either tow smaller trailers than I do, or less often or not at all. I’m having a hard time believing it’s my driving habits when 25% of my miles are towing and only one other customer has this problem. Has anyone else found a fix for this? Thanks!
With your truck regening every 1-200 miles, you had better keep a close eye on your motor oil. Don’t even think about going the 15K miles or one year between changes. Regening causes fuel dilution. Fuel dilution can cause regens when the oil gets thinned down and the engine starts consuming the oil. Diesel is not a sufficient lubricant for engine bearings, lifters or anything else.I have a 2019 2500 with the 6.7. We have been having the issue with it going into regen every 100-200 miles since they changed out the fuel pump early last year. Its been in the shop at least 3 times now and for 7 weeks just on the current occurrence. I've been going round and round with the service people, dealer (who is trying to sell me a new truck) and FCA customer service to get this thing fixed. I got a letter from FCA that says they have extended the warranty on the emissions components to 10 yrs and 120,000 miles. Dont know if my complaining had anything to do with it or not but I'm waiting to hear back from FCA customer service about the current status of repairs. I could take back my truck and drive it like it is but I can't drive an extra 10 to 60+ miles every 100-200 miles to clear the regens. And if you think about it, every excessive regen wears down that additional mileage warranty. I'm not very happy right now.
The warranty extension is from the Cummins emission scandal.I have a 2019 2500 with the 6.7. We have been having the issue with it going into regen every 100-200 miles since they changed out the fuel pump early last year. Its been in the shop at least 3 times now and for 7 weeks just on the current occurrence. I've been going round and round with the service people, dealer (who is trying to sell me a new truck) and FCA customer service to get this thing fixed. I got a letter from FCA that says they have extended the warranty on the emissions components to 10 yrs and 120,000 miles. Dont know if my complaining had anything to do with it or not but I'm waiting to hear back from FCA customer service about the current status of repairs. I could take back my truck and drive it like it is but I can't drive an extra 10 to 60+ miles every 100-200 miles to clear the regens. And if you think about it, every excessive regen wears down that additional mileage warranty. I'm not very happy right now.
My DPF gauge, too, goes up quickly when I go over 60mph. Takes a while at 70-75 for it to come back down. It’s as if it runs it worse around 60-70 mph and creates more soot there than slower. Above that speed is less soot and maybe offset slightly by higher temps in exhaust. #shrugI can’t say 100% it was just the Archoil, but I’m about 95% certain it was. I do feel like I still have some weird issues as the dpf% will shoot up as I get on the highway, but now it will at least come back down if given enough time driving.
That’s pretty common, most folks that have commented on that says theirs behaves the same way, mine included.I do feel like I still have some weird issues as the dpf% will shoot up as I get on the highway
We will probably do just a few short trips to show off after we received the 3500, but she will just do long distance and towing a lot.Nah, you’ll love it. However get a CTS3 or Banks Gauge from day zero so you can learn the habits of your truck (especially when it is time to regen for whatever reason).
Keep records of everything, log regens if possible and if you drive it short distances a lot, take it out for a good long drive or tow something.
There is so much good info here it makes life so much easier.
If you’re trying to get in touch with Banks directly, shoot me a private message and I can help make those connections for you.We will probably do just a few short trips to show off after we received the 3500, but she will just do long distance and towing a lot.
There is a few Banks goodies I want but gearbox mods get preference before engine mods just battling to communicate with some of the suppliers in America from Australia, nobody seems to have email contacts on their websites.
Sorry forgot to mention we use FTC Diesel Decarbonizer for soot build up so will have it ready when the big Ram gets home.
Fueling calibration and delivery may indeed be part of the problem. However, I would expect more users would be experiencing issues if the software was at fault. Although, many users may not be paying attention to the regeneration cycles. They may be having issues but are unaware of it. Thats the problem with this problem, it can hide itself very easily if the operator isn’t paying attention, and moreover will not always generate a DTC. My own truck has never generated a P2459 but I can tell you it has been regenerating more than it necessarily should simply because I monitor all of my trucks functions very closely (sometimes to a fault). The data is a good way to see what the truck is doing, rather than simply relying on DTC’s. Which is what most dealerships will do. No DTC? = “operating as designed”So I have to ask, as my truck goes back in soon for the regeneration issue, since the architect appears to be working for a number of people, is there any chance this is a fuel system related issue (calibration or delivery). I'm just wondering because at first they blamed the extra glue on the air filters, which changed nothing, then other parts, then we weren't driving hard enough, etc.
I'm not saying the archoil doesn't work, but I am saying we shouldn't have to spend more money on an additive to essentially bandage an issue on $100k dollar truck.
Another note, I do have less codes while running lower at lower coastal altitudes than I do at my home at 8k feet. Take that for what it is, but I have noticed it.
If you’re trying to get in touch with Banks directly, shoot me a private message and I can help make those connections for you.
My reach doesn’t go that high….but I can help make connections if there’s an issue with their products. There’s a few members here who work directly for Banks. I try not to advertise that publicly as to buffer them from undue hassle or complaining but they do indeed strive incredibly hard to provide top notch customer service.can you ask gale when he's going to come out with his amazing deringer for the 6.7 lol.
depending on trim, some trucks you cant even monitor the dpf i think. may be wrong. i was amazed that my buddys top of the ecoturd didnt have the ability to see any of those stats
gotcha. yea i wouldnt advertise those people lol. i was invited by my friend to a banks facebook group and its pretty hectic there.My reach doesn’t go that high….but I can help make connections if there’s an issue with their products. There’s a few members here who work directly for Banks. I try not to advertise that publicly as to buffer them from undue hassle or complaining but they do indeed strive incredibly hard to provide top notch customer service.
Every 2019+ truck has the ability to see the soot level in the DPF using factory gauges. The only factor that is different is that the 23+ models with the fully digital instrument cluster do not provide regular notice messages when the truck goes into an active regeneration cycle. They only provide intervention strategy messages if there’s a problem with regeneration.