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I like my 2015 Ram 3/4 ton with the 6.4 hemi. But the washboard gravel roads around here that I'm on for hunting, camping, and scouting are absolutely killing me. Airing down the tires and 4wdHi helps a bit, but not much. I was thinking about putting money into new tuned shocks, maybe some spring work, and it's time for new tires anyway. I'm pulling my camper (bumper pull) or enclosed ATV trailer about half the time, so I was thinking air springs for that. But, I'm no gear head by any stretch, so I'd just be going to a local shop, explaining my problem, and hoping for the best. I don't really want to get rid of it for a split front end GM. But if the work above turns into a giant bill, that might make more sense.

I traded my diesel out for this one and am glad I did, I definitely don't tow enough to justify that. My Cooper tires have not held up well, I've got about 25k on them and they're all crumbly, with your bare fingers you can pick a 1/2 inch square cube off any of the four of them. They're not wearing with respect to tread depth so the local shop was no help with warranty options.

Any advice? Thanks in advance.




Last edited by superdave; 01/09/21.
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Check the steering gear mount and associated linkage. All this will make it worse if worn too bad. Might be getting close to the " Death Wobble". 3/4 T Dodges ride hard. I put up with my 98 for 20 years. Never did find a cure. Good luck


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I'd talked to Carlisuspension first. They will probably have some ideas. Probably the best way is to go to large, 12.5, 37 inch tires and air them down. Going to longer travel, lighter load springs and shocks probably would help as well. The Ram Power Wagon has a much lighter load capacity than the standard 2500's which is probably a clue.
I know what you mean. I've got an 06 Ram 2500. E

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Originally Posted by Oheremicus
I'd talked to Carlisuspension first. They will probably have some ideas. Probably the best way is to go to large, 12.5, 37 inch tires and air them down. Going to longer travel, lighter load springs and shocks probably would help as well. The Ram Power Wagon has a much lighter load capacity than the standard 2500's which is probably a clue.
I know what you mean. I've got an 06 Ram 2500. E


I've got a 2006 Ram 2500 as my hunting/outdoors rig. I feel your pain.

I was going to offer the OP a ride in my truck, it'll make him appreciate the ride of his 2015.

Saddlesore is correct; 3/4-ton Rams ride hard.


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Thanks, guys, I'll check out that Carli stuff and the steering linkage. All good advice here.

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Timbren and old man emu are other names that I hear kicked around, although I haven’t used either. My fathers ram 2500 had a horrible ride compared to my Chevy, especially in washboard roads.

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A ride in my old 2000 Cummins will make you appreciate the 15, I've learned to live with it but riding in the 3/4 ton Fords is no better, especially the diesels.

I recently drove a 15 Cummins with Carli suspension and 37s, it rode like a Cadillac compared to mine, it also had the Carli sway bar which he said made a big difference.

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The only real fix for washboards is adjusting the speedometer so it reads about 10 mph. it's not much of a solution but not much else works.


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Originally Posted by Rock Chuck
The only real fix for washboards is adjusting the speedometer so it reads about 10 mph. it's not much of a solution but not much else works.


Two fixes actually. Super slow, or relatively fast. Both smooth out washboards.


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Check out Thuren fabrication coils. Cheaper solution than carlie and in my opinion just as good. I have them on my 16 3/4 diesel. I put them on right away to level the truck. They are a 2.5 or 3” easy ride coil. I didn’t upgrade to the good shocks just the thuren branded ones. Better than stock but my back end is still really stiff and makes washboard no fun. Helped front end a lot. I am sure the fox or other shocks offered would help even more.

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Put some more weight in the truck bed. Go to bilstein shocks.

Guys that do hard labor, usually have stronger cores and back muscles:
Farmers, masons, roofers, loggers, concrete construction, soldiers, etc.

If you don't do hard labor, hit up a gym to strengthen your core and back.

Or.....sell it for a softer, wallowing marshmallow like tundra.

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Originally Posted by BillyGoatGruff
Originally Posted by Rock Chuck
The only real fix for washboards is adjusting the speedometer so it reads about 10 mph. it's not much of a solution but not much else works.


Two fixes actually. Super slow, or relatively fast. Both smooth out washboards.
Hitting them fast might feel smoother but you're thrashing your suspension. Also, if it gets away from you at a higher speed, it hits things harder.


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B2601 and box blade...problem solved.

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Since we are offering rides,
A 93 Cummins if you stop by.


Didn't mind it when it was new and I was young.
Now I don't run it much, and every time I do,
I'm amazed how dam rough it is.


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Originally Posted by BillyGoatGruff
Originally Posted by Rock Chuck
The only real fix for washboards is adjusting the speedometer so it reads about 10 mph. it's not much of a solution but not much else works.


Two fixes actually. Super slow, or relatively fast. Both smooth out washboards.



Yeah, as long as the shocks are still working, a bit more speed usually helps. Just slow enough to not drift around the turns but fast enough to stay on top.


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Originally Posted by mainer_in_ak
Put some more weight in the truck bed.


This is true as well.

I had 3, 5' or 6' concrete parking blocks in the bed of my truck for a couple of weeks. Big difference in the ride quality.


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I have air bags on mine. If they have any air in them, it gets REALLY rough. They're a pain to air up and down but I'm too cheap to spend hundreds for an onboard compressor.


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King Racing shocks. Made a startling difference on my '14. Would be even better with softer springs, I know, but I wanted to retain the load capacity and tow capacity that I have.


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