1995 DODGE RAM 2500

5.9L I6 Cummins Diesel4WDAUTOMATICdieselturbo
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$13,597 maintenance + known platform issues
~$2,719/yr · 230¢/mile equivalent · $6,427 maintenance + $4,250 expected platform issues
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5.7L V8 Hemi
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5.7L V8 Hemi
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6.7L I6 Cummins Diesel
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 1995 Ram 2500 is a workhorse that splits into two camps: the legendary 12-valve Cummins diesel that can outlast the truck around it, and gas V8/V10 engines that face typical Chrysler durability issues. The platform itself—transmission, cooling, chassis—shows its age hard after 150,000 miles.

Automatic Transmission Failure (46RE/47RE)

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 120,000-180,000 mi
Symptoms: Slipping between gears, especially 2nd-3rd shift, Delayed engagement when shifting to Drive or Reverse, Burnt transmission fluid smell, dark brown or black fluid, Check engine light with transmission codes
Fix: The 46RE behind gas engines and 47RE behind the Cummins are weak links. Overdrive clutches burn out, valve body wears. Full rebuild is 12-16 hours labor. Many shops recommend upgraded clutch packs and valve body during rebuild to prevent repeat failure. Towing or neglected fluid changes accelerate death.
Estimated cost: $2,200-3,800

Transmission Cooler Line Failure at Radiator

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 80,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: Transmission fluid leaking from radiator area, Pink or red fluid pooling under front of truck, Transmission running hot, slipping after warmup, Milky transmission fluid if coolant cross-contamination occurs
Fix: Steel cooler lines rust through where they enter the radiator, or the internal cooler itself fails allowing coolant and ATF to mix (instant transmission death). Replace lines and add external cooler as preventive—2-3 hours labor. If cross-contamination happened, transmission needs full flush or rebuild.
Estimated cost: $300-600 (lines only), $2,500-4,000 (if trans contaminated)

5.9L Magnum V8 Plenum Gasket Leak

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 60,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: Rough idle, especially when cold, Loss of power under acceleration, Check engine light with lean codes (P0171/P0174), Hissing sound from intake area
Fix: The intake plenum gasket deteriorates and creates vacuum leaks. Requires removing upper intake plenum—3-4 hours labor. Use Hughes Engines kit or similar upgraded gasket, not OEM paper gasket which fails again. Common enough that it should be assumed done or needing done on any high-mileage example.
Estimated cost: $400-700

8.0L V10 Exhaust Manifold Cracking

Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 70,000-140,000 mi
Symptoms: Loud ticking or popping from engine bay, worse when cold, Exhaust smell in cabin, Visible cracks in cast iron manifolds
Fix: The V10 manifolds crack from heat cycles. Both sides often need replacement eventually. 6-8 hours labor because of tight engine bay and stud breakage. Aftermarket tubular headers solve it permanently but add cost. Factor this into any V10 purchase—it's when, not if.
Estimated cost: $800-1,400

Steering Box Wear and Wander

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 100,000-180,000 mi
Symptoms: Excessive play in steering wheel (more than 2 inches before wheels respond), Constant correction needed to maintain straight line, Clunking when turning from center, Wandering at highway speeds
Fix: Steering gearbox wears internally, sector shaft bushings slop out. Rebuild kits exist but most shops replace the box—3-4 hours labor. Alignment required after. This combined with worn track bar bushings makes these trucks feel terrifying on the highway until addressed.
Estimated cost: $500-900

Front Suspension Ball Joint Failure

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-130,000 mi
Symptoms: Clunking over bumps from front end, Vibration in steering wheel, Uneven tire wear on inside edges, Visible play when prying on tire at 12 and 6 o'clock
Fix: Upper and lower ball joints wear, uppers tend to fail first. These are heavy trucks and joints take abuse. Requires pressing out old joints or replacing entire control arms—4-6 hours for both sides. Do both sides and all four joints at once. Catastrophic failure means wheel folds under and you crash.
Estimated cost: $600-1,200

Fuel Pump Failure (Gas Engines)

Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 90,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: No start condition, cranks but won't fire, Intermittent stalling, especially when hot, Loss of power under load or acceleration, Whining noise from fuel tank area before failure
Fix: In-tank fuel pump dies from age and contamination. Requires dropping 35-gallon fuel tank—2-3 hours labor if tank isn't full and rusty. Replace fuel filter at same time. Not an issue on Cummins with mechanical lift pump.
Estimated cost: $400-750

12-Valve Cummins Killer Dowel Pin (KDP)

Rare · high severity
Symptoms: Sudden catastrophic engine failure with metal-on-metal noise, Loss of all oil pressure, Engine seizes without warning
Fix: A front gear case dowel pin can work loose and drop into timing gears, destroying the engine instantly. 1994-1998 Cummins issue. Fix is preventive—install a tab or updated pin kit, 2-3 hours labor. Cheap insurance ($100-200) that every 12-valve owner should do. If it fails, engine is toast—$8,000-12,000 for replacement.
Estimated cost: $150-300 (preventive fix)
Owner tips
  • If buying a Cummins: verify KDP fix was done, inspect for transmission cooler upgrades, and budget for transmission work regardless of current condition—the engine will outlast everything else.
  • Gas engines: assume plenum gasket needs doing, check for coolant in trans fluid before purchase.
  • Replace transmission cooler lines preemptively and add external cooler—saves the transmission.
  • Front end: plan to replace ball joints, steering box, and track bar bushings as a package around 100k.
  • These trucks rust badly—inspect frame rails, cab corners, and bed mounting areas carefully.
Buy the 12-valve Cummins if you can afford to rebuild the transmission immediately; avoid the V10 unless you need the power and accept the manifold tax; the 5.9 Magnum is adequate but nothing special—budget $3,000-5,000 in deferred maintenance on any example.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.
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