In April my oldest son and I did a fly and drive to Florida for a 1998 Ram.
The truck had been my fathers household and used as daily driver and tow vehicle for approx 15 years. He replaced it with a new 2021 Ram 1500 quad cab in January, so the 98 is moving to Mass.
It's been a Florida truck it's whole life, so very little rust anywhere. It's got 176k miles on the 5.2 and 46RE (I still need to crawl under and confirm the model). Everything works and it still has the factory exhaust (although I did replace the last 20" since the factory tips rusted out).
Plans are to address some current issues and do some work to get it ready for a life in New England. The goal is to address some leaks and do some preventative maintenance to make it last as long as possible.
Current list of projects:
- Fixing the power locks: the gears in the lock mechanism are stripped so the latch assemblies will be replaced. I'll also get a fob so the keyless entry will work.
- Rear main seal: it looks like there is a small leak in the rear main, but I need to do some more investigation to determine if it's oil or trans fluid before ordering parts. If I drop the pan I'll probably replace the oil pump and take a look at a couple bearings.
- Transmission input seal: If I find the leak is transmission fluid I'll pull the trans and replace the input seal and replace as much fluid as possible since I'll be separating the torque converter from the trans.
- Transmission modifications: I'm considering installing a Transgo shift improver kit and possibly a 3.8 ratio band engagement lever (recommended in the Transgo tech notes). I'm not looking for any real performance increases, just looking to make it last as long as possible by reducing the potential for slippage.
- Steering box: it has a Napa reman box in it that was installed last year, but it's leaking by the steering shaft so it need to be replaced. While I'm not looking to mod it now, I may consider converting to a 3rd gen rack in the future to replace the steering box/idler arm setup.
More info to follow, but here's a pic: