2025 Ram 1500 Review – No Hemi, No Cry

Tim Healey
by Tim Healey

Sometimes, less is more.

Or, in this case, fewer is more. That’s because the available cylinder count in the 2025 Ram 1500 is reduced by two, and as any grammar stickler will tell you, it’s “fewer” when it comes to things you count. Such as, you know, the number of cylinders in an engine.


The “fewer” here refers to the reduced cylinder count in the 2025 Ram 1500. No more V8 Hemi engines. Instead, the 3.6-liter V6 soldiers on in some trims while the stars of the show are the new kids on the block – two Hurricane straight sixes.

Both have more power than the outgoing Hemi. So as much as we might miss the V8 and its roar – as well as a tiny bit of towing capacity – the tradeoff is strong acceleration. I can live with that, and you probably can, too.

Unlike Florida residents, you can choose your Hurricane – you can go with a 3.0-liter twin-turbo, standard-output inline-six or a 3.0-liter twin-turbo, high-output inline-six. Both mate to an eight-speed automatic transmission.

The change in engines is the biggest story, though the truck is also refreshed inside and out. The biggest non-engine news is the addition of the Tungsten luxury trim. All told there are now seven trims, with the top-trim Tungsten fetching close to six figures. Ram folks told me the Bighorn with a crew cab and four-wheel drive is expected to remain the volume trim.

(Full disclosure: Ram flew me to Austin, Texas and fed and housed me for two nights. The company offered a hat, which I did not take, and a notebook, which I did.)

We had to the chance to drive the trucks on-road and off-road and to tow an Airstream trailer. I didn’t have time to tow, but I took a Rebel trim around the off-road course. My morning was spent piloting a Tungsten with the afternoon spent behind the wheel of a Rebel.

It’s been quite some time since I’ve driven a Ram, but I did notice the additional power on tap, especially in the Tungsten with the H.O. There’s grunt a plenty – you can easily spin the rears from a stop if the bed is unladen. I had no issue getting around a pokey (and stinky) semi-truck on a rural two-lane outside of Austin.

The standard output engine is unsurprisingly not as potent, but that’s fine – there’s still enough thrust to handle most situations.

This truck handles gentle corners just fine, but there’s enough body roll here, as well as some in-lane wander, to remind you that you’re driving a truck. This was especially true with the all-terrain-rubber shod Rebel. On the flip side, both trucks rode smoothly on the mostly unbroken Texas pavement, with the Tungsten being quite pleasant yet never soft.

Off road, the Rebel got around just fine. The course was rather challenging, and minus one scraped skid plate, little of note or concern happened. A front-facing camera helps you navigate obstacles, and a speed-limiting feature helps you go downhill at just the right amount of crawl.

There are two off-road modes for the available adjustable air suspension. The basic suspension setup is a double-wishbone in the front and a five-link solid rear axle out back.

The Tungsten gets specialized treatment. That includes a power tailgate, unique RAM badge, and a different LED taillight design. Inside, it gets an Indigo and Sea Salt color scheme, metal accents with diamond knurling, and suede wrapping for the headliner, A-pillar, and B-pillar, and visors. The heated and cooled front seats are skinned with Natura Plus leather and offer a massage feature and lumbar support. Tungstens also get unique gauges, unique interior badging including a VIN plate, a crystal cap for the shifter, Klipsch Reference Premiere audio with 23 speakers, dual wireless chargers, and metal pedals.

It's a good-looking cabin with materials that feel price appropriate, though I must warn you – the Klipsch audio will distort songs on satellite radio if you crank it up too high. I am told this has to do with the size of the audio files used by SiriusXM – indeed, the audio sounded much better using Spotify.

All the trims have unique to them interior accents/colors. The trim walk goes like this: Tradesman, Big Horn (Lone Star in Texas), Laramie, Rebel, Limited Longhorn, Limited, and Tungsten.

The 3.6-liter with a mild hybrid assist remains available in the Tradesman and Big Horn/Lone Star, while the standard output is available in the Tradesman, Big Horn/Lone Star, Laramie, and Rebel.

Should you want more power, and the maximum towing capacity of 11,580 pounds, the high output is available in the Longhorn, Limited, and Tungsten.

There are two available infotainment screens, 12- and 14.5-inches, with the latter offering reconfigurable split-screen setups. The truck uses the updated – and Ram says, much faster – Uconnect 5 infotainment system.

Other key pieces of available tech include a digital camera rearview mirror with a towing mode, a digital key, on-board power inverter, and head-up display.

There are also two different semi-autonomous driving features available. One is a “hands-free” mode that allows drivers to go mostly hands-free – you still need to maintain a light touch on the wheel. This one is called active-driving assist. The second is called Hands-Free Driving Assist, and like Ford’s BlueCruise and General Motor’s Super Cruise, it works on certain roads and provides Level 2 autonomous driving on those roads if the driver chooses.

Other tech and advanced-driver assist features include automatic emergency braking +, blind-spot monitoring, adaptive cruise control, full-speed forward collision-warning plus, parallel and perpendicular park assist, active lane management, 360-degree camera, drowsiness detection, traffic-sign recognition, trailer reverse-steering control, adaptive cornering fog lamps, a cargo bed lamp, automatic high beams, and rain-sensing windshield wipers.

Available comfort/convenience features include a dual-pane power sunroof, heated front seats, heated steering wheel, dual-zone climate control, keyless entry and starting, RamBox, bed extender, spray-in bedliner, skid plates, tow hooks, hill descent control, all-terrain tires, tow-specific navigation, rear electronic locking axle, and more.

You can get a quad cab with a 6’4” box, a crew cab with a 5’7” box, or a crew cab with a 6’4” box.

Base pricing is as follows: $40,275 for the Tradesman, $44,935 for the Big Horn/Lone Star, $64,195 for the Rebel, $60,030 for the Laramie, $75,605 for the Limited Longhorn, $75,155 for the Limited, and $87,155 for the Tungsten. Destination is $1,995.

The pre-production Tungsten I tested came in as-tested at $90,535 while the Rebel I drove on the off-road was $81,835 as-tested.

Fuel economy is still officially TBA – we saw about 15.5 mpg in both trucks.

The refreshed Ram improves on what is already the best interior in the class, adds a high-falutin’ fancy-pants trim, and drops two cylinders while gaining power. The 1500 continues to offer a strong package.

Less – or fewer – sometimes really is more.

[Images © 2024 Tim Healey/TTAC.com, Ram/Stellantis]

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Tim Healey
Tim Healey

Tim Healey grew up around the auto-parts business and has always had a love for cars — his parents joke his first word was “‘Vette”. Despite this, he wanted to pursue a career in sports writing but he ended up falling semi-accidentally into the automotive-journalism industry, first at Consumer Guide Automotive and later at Web2Carz.com. He also worked as an industry analyst at Mintel Group and freelanced for About.com, CarFax, Vehix.com, High Gear Media, Torque News, FutureCar.com, Cars.com, among others, and of course Vertical Scope sites such as AutoGuide.com, Off-Road.com, and HybridCars.com. He’s an urbanite and as such, doesn’t need a daily driver, but if he had one, it would be compact, sporty, and have a manual transmission.

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  • 3-On-The-Tree 3-On-The-Tree on Feb 25, 2024

    Lou BC

    I drive my V8 2021 Tundra to work everyday 30 Miles round trip 16-18 mpg highway In addition to the 2009 C6 Corvette LS3 6.2L that gets 32mpg highway . Honestly I’m not worried about mpg.

    • Lou_BC Lou_BC on Feb 26, 2024

      @GBJT



      I pay attention to fuel range. MPG or litres per 100 km is something one needs to know.

      I haven't been as concerned about range with my ZR2 diesel because fuel consumption is pleasantly low. Last summer I did an extended 4 day overlander trip with friends. My fuel consumption was 1/2 of a V6 Jeep and around 25 - 30% better than a turbo 4 banger Jeep. I could have done the whole 600 km trip on one tank.

      My dual sport bike on the other hand is good for 240 km under ideal conditions. 200 km under hard use. I've ran dry several times within range of a fuel station.

      I pushed my luck once with my old 2010 F150 (5.4) towing a Jeep. My count down gauge ticked to zero as I pulled up to the pumps. My 136 litre tank took 136 litres to fill.




  • Dukeisduke Dukeisduke on Feb 27, 2024

    No pictures at all of the Hurricane six?!? Did they not let journalists open the hood?

  • Tassos Obsolete relic is NOT a used car.It might have attracted some buyers in ITS DAY, 1985, 40 years ago, but NOT today, unless you are a damned fool.
  • Stan Reither Jr. Part throttle efficiency was mentioned earlier in a postThis type of reciprocating engine opens the door to achieve(slightly) variable stroke which would provide variable mechanical compression ratio adjustments for high vacuum (light load) or boost(power) conditions IMO
  • Joe65688619 Keep in mind some of these suppliers are not just supplying parts, but assembled components (easy example is transmissions). But there are far more, and the more they are electronically connected and integrated with rest of the platform the more complex to design, engineer, and manufacture. Most contract manufacturers don't make a lot of money in the design and engineering space because their customers to that. Commodity components can be sourced anywhere, but there are only a handful of contract manufacturers (usually diversified companies that build all kinds of stuff for other brands) can engineer and build the more complex components, especially with electronics. Every single new car I've purchased in the last few years has had some sort of electronic component issue: Infinti (battery drain caused by software bug and poorly grounded wires), Acura (radio hiss, pops, burps, dash and infotainment screens occasionally throw errors and the ignition must be killed to reboot them, voice nav, whether using the car's system or CarPlay can't seem to make up its mind as to which speakers to use and how loud, even using the same app on the same trip - I almost jumped in my seat once), GMC drivetrain EMF causing a whine in the speakers that even when "off" that phased with engine RPM), Nissan (didn't have issues until 120K miles, but occassionally blew fuses for interior components - likely not a manufacturing defect other than a short developed somewhere, but on a high-mileage car that was mechanically sound was too expensive to fix (a lot of trial and error and tracing connections = labor costs). What I suspect will happen is that only the largest commodity suppliers that can really leverage their supply chain will remain, and for the more complex components (think bumper assemblies or the electronics for them supporting all kinds of sensors) will likley consolidate to a handful of manufacturers who may eventually specialize in what they produce. This is part of the reason why seemingly minor crashes cost so much - an auto brand does nst have the parts on hand to replace an integrated sensor , nor the expertice as they never built them, but bought them). And their suppliers, in attempt to cut costs, build them in way that is cheap to manufacture (not necessarily poorly bulit) but difficult to replace without swapping entire assemblies or units).I've love to see an article on repair costs and how those are impacting insurance rates. You almost need gap insurance now because of how quickly cars depreciate yet remain expensive to fix (orders more to originally build, in some cases). No way I would buy a CyberTruck - don't want one, but if I did, this would stop me. And it's not just EVs.
  • Joe65688619 I agree there should be more sedans, but recognize the trend. There's still a market for performance oriented-drivers. IMHO a low budget sedan will always be outsold by a low budget SUV. But a sports sedan, or a well executed mid-level sedan (the Accord and Camry) work. Smaller market for large sedans except I think for an older population. What I'm hoping to see is some consolidation across brands - the TLX for example is not selling well, but if it was offered only in the up-level configurations it would not be competing with it's Honda sibling. I know that makes the market smaller and niche, but that was the original purpose of the "luxury" brands - badge-engineering an existing platform at a relatively lower cost than a different car and sell it with a higher margin for buyers willing and able to pay for them. Also creates some "brand cachet." But smart buyers know that simple badging and slightly better interiors are usually not worth the cost. Put the innovative tech in the higher-end brands first, differentiate they drivetrain so it's "better" (the RDX sells well for Acura, same motor and tranmission, added turbo which makes a notable difference compared to the CRV). The sedan in many Western European countries is the "family car" as opposed to micro and compact crossovers (which still sell big, but can usually seat no more than a compact sedan).
  • Jonathan IMO the hatchback sedans like the Audi A5 Sportback, the Kia Stinger, and the already gone Buick Sportback are the answer to SUVs. The A5 and the AWD version of the Stinger being the better overall option IMO. I drive the A5, and love the depth and size of the trunk space as well as the low lift over. I've yet to find anything I need to carry that I can't, although I admit I don't carry things like drywall, building materials, etc. However, add in the fun to drive handling characteristics, there's almost no SUV that compares.
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