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Comments
I will tend to the air pressure and make your suggested changes...i have the standard el cheapo factory tires.
truck goes in the body shop on 7-30 for repair of the roof and rear quarter panel....
thanks again,
stephen
I can't recall the number, but I bought one and it fit just fine.
Since it was such a pain to remove the cover to check the air filter, I went to truckperformance.com and got a K&N air filter from them for about 40 bucks and it fit perfectly.
I cant recall the brand name but the orange smell is the clue.. Good Luck
catch drips..some light scrubbing and it was gone. After that wash the entire area, and wax.
I used 2 seperate coats of wax. Cannot see any residue of where my 4x4, and dodge stickers were. The dodge sticker peels off ok, but leaves adhesive which needs to be removed. Take your time. I also used a blow dryer and removed the SLT , and dakota badges on the door.
I like it ! Ger.
I removed all badges (except hood) and door mouldings. Then ran a charcoal pinstripe (3/16") along top edge of lower Bright Silver Metallic paint. Upper color is Bright White. Adds some defintion and length to your decal-less truck, but the look is still clean.
take care
Well after a year of reading these posts I still haven't seen my question answered. So here goes.
I bought my QC last August from a dealer, it had everything I wanted (V-8, 4x4, towing package, the works) and is the best truck I've ever owned. It had everything but one item that has been driving me crazy. I thought I could live with the buckets but I still want the option of the 40/20/40 bench because there are more and more occasions that I want to have five passengers.
Anyway, the local dealers have not been any help. Can any of you offer suggestions? I live in the Denver-Boulder Metro.
Thanks
For more details, read my Dakota FAQ #63 about how I removed all my exterior decals.
skylerk "Dodge Dakota Owners - FAQs" Dec 15, 2000 4:39pm
Concerning your bucket seat problem....
You are right the Durango does indeed have a lumbar adjustment. However, I am not sure that it is on the passenger side.
You can go this link and see what I did to solve the problem however....
http://www.ayrow.com/seats.html
If it bothers you, get a piece of rubber hose or PVC and make an extension to route the water away from your exhaust pipe.
Although the cotton-gauze-type filters that are washed/oiled (ie...K-N) are popular, I wonder how many folks actually degrease/re-oil their filters often enough to provide any real benifet. Have you taken into account the time/cost of degreasing/reoiling a cotton-gauze filter? After you degrease your filter... where do you dispose the toxic liquid that is left over? How much will that cost you?
Besides... who needs more flow anyway? How often do you have your truck at redline where it is breathing heavilly? Even spirited driving will not reach the limits of the stock filter.
I payd cash for my Dakota and want it to last AT LEAST 12 years and 150K miles....For my money/time, I will use air-filters that disposable and cost MUCH less than the oiled-cotton-gauze-type. Heck... over 150K miles I may only need to replace the airfilter only 5 times anyway.
Briggs and Stratton has for YEARS used a foam filter which is oiled. Unless there are people mowing concrete or blacktop I would assume that a mower of any type must run in a much dirtier environment than our trucks. That being the case, why would B&S use a filtering system which does not do its job? Logic would dictate that B&S would have to allocate lots of funds to cover warranty claims due to engines failing from to much ingestion of dust, grass, and other foreign material.
As I mentioned... my TIME is valuble to me too. Replacing a filter is about 3 minutes. Buying degreaser and filter-oil, Degreasing/reoiling, paying to dispose the waste cleaning fluid...etc. would cost me your $31.96 and then some.
To elaborate on some of your other points. YES B&S uses oiled-foam very successfully. The OIL is the secret. (some farm-tractor air-filters just draw air OVER a puddle of oil to filter the air)
This is why I suggested that many folks DO NOT properly degrease and re-oil their cotton-gauze filter (which requires buying degreaser and filter-oil each time.)
Also, keep in mind that the B&S engines do not get close to the equivilent 150K miles of use either. (many push-lawmmowers last about 5 years of occasional use) An automobile "breathes" 10,000s of gallons of air during its lifetime.... not so a one-lunger lawnmower.
Sorry, not very technical but I had to add my .02
THe secret is an excuse for a cold one. After all, while its still under warranty and pretty much maintains itself, what other reasons do we have to get under the hood?
so, bpeebles, that is the reason. And ahasher said it first here.
If I had a garage (with or without the pit) I do see your point about spending more time under the hood cleaning a K&N. (I'll bet a creeper works better in a garage than on dirt ;-)
Once the snow flies here in Vermont, my maintenance time on my truck is cut way back to plugging in the block heater before heading to the house.
Gee where do you Buy your air-filters from? I got a replacement air filter from my Local auto parts place for $6.00 I think it was a Fram air filter Brand, this was my first a/f change after about 10,000 miles on my 01 QC 4x4 awd with the works !
2001 quad cab
mounting bolts. Anyway, I just went out and checked the belt anchor bolts on my '01 Quad Cab manufactured during the first week of May '01 and sure enough the driver side anchor bolt that anchors the bottom part of the belt was in fact loose as heck .. basically it was only finger tight. Anyway, all the other anchor bolts were tight. I just tightened up the loose one. Curious did the recall notice (I did not get one yet) say front anchors, all anchors or what?
Bill in NY
I'll have to get a peek at mine and see if they are loose after 27,000 miles of ignorance!
Quad goes in ody shop on monday for repair of roof and right rear panel that was hurt from tree fall.
All else appears to be working fine.
stephen
Thanks
Tom.
As suggested above, your driving style/conditions have a bearing on what is required. If longevity is your goal... this also has some weight on what may help prolong the life of your truck.
Let me go thru your list with some comments on your question of intending to keep this truck for a long time;
oil change
Just stick to your schedule on this one... if it is due...have it changed.
belt/hose inspections
Not required for longevity...just reliability. Thoroughly inspecting the hoses and belt should take no more that 3 minutes.
tune-up (replace plugs)
Not required for longevity... may improve MPG if your plugs are unusually dirty.
adjust timing
TIMING NOT ADJUSTABLE This one can be taken off of the list!
replace fuel filter
The fuel filter is in the fuel tank. The service manual says to only replace if it throws an errorcode to have it changed. This one can be taken off of the list!
replace air filter
Not required for longevity... may improve MPG if your filter is unusually dirty. You can do this yourself without tools (but a screwdriver makes it easier).
throttle body service ($90)
WHAT THE HECK IS THIS?? Did they tell you what they do here?
I cleaned my throttle body with synthetic cleaner yesterday. I even did my wifes car and daughters too... I STILL have plenty of cleaner left in the can. (less than $3USD)
brake inspection
Not required for longevity... This is more a safety item (and an oppertunity to sell you brakes)
service cooling system ($60)
YES!! If properly done, this will prolong the life of your trucks cooling system.
CV joint pack ($43)
YES!! If properly done, this will prolong the life of your front halfshafts. (If improprly done... this will severly REDUCE the life of your front halfshafts.)
ITEMS THAT SHOULD BE ON THE LIST FOR LONGEVETY;
replace xfer and differential fluids.
service xmission (especially an automatic)
rotate tires
lube all hinges (door, hood and tailgate)
replace brake and clutch fluid. (bleed ENTIRE sustem to exchange fluid)
change power steering fluid.
YES!! If properly done, this will prolong the life of your front halfshafts. (If improprly done... this will severly REDUCE the life of your front halfshafts.)
Never heard of it.
Yes you can. You can order the door trim in any color if you ask for the Durango door trim kit. It's the same length for each part. If you want the black, then order the Dakota kit. I have the black on my SLT (first one in 3/00 for my dealer) and I really like if both for looks and function.
I have a 2001 4.7 Sport+ with fender flares and the 265/70R16 tires.
Measuring from level ground to the center bottom of the fender flares, the fronts are both at 37 inches.
The driver side rear is 39 inches, the pax rear is 38 inches...go figure...the driver side has the gas tank kinda of left centered, right?.
The pax side has a big Flowmaster SUV 50 series muffler with dual pipes...guess I should ask the Service dept about the difference
Re: the difference in the front and rear height, is it really a torsion bar issue or weight of the 4.7 engine that pulls the front down?
BTW, has anyone else with the same model taken the same measurements?
During pickup when my truck was new, there was a exact same model in the dealer lot, my truck sat two inches higher...does DC have that much tolerance for the settings on the assembly line?
Thanks!
I was standing next to the truck earlier this week and had a look at the pass-side rear tire. Nothing special, then I had a look at the pass-side front. Then back to rear, and to front again. Then it dawned on me: the tires were different! I had a look on the driver's side, both were the same as the pass-side front tire. The pass-side rear was mounted with the tire that ships with the 4wd trucks, the other three were as expected for my 2wd. I also had a look at the spare, which was the expected 2wd tire.
The embarassment stems from the fact that I've put 7900 miles on the truck and never noticed, though I am nevertheless left to wonder (a) how it happened, and (b) why the dealer didn't notice during PDI.
Since I'm overdue for my 7500 mile service anyway I'll bring it up when the truck goes in and see if they'll do anything about it, though frankly I'm not holding my breath.
twj
The only drawback that I can see is the Prostripe would not have the finished ends.
Hope I helped. Try www.prostripe.com