Key Points
The uConnect infortainment system has a reputation. It's not a good one, but it's well earned.
Uconnect Re-boot: Hold Mute and Tune buttons for reboot. This makes no changes to your settings, it is just a reboot procedure. Uconnect Factory (Engineering) reset: Hold temp up and down buttons to access engineering menu. This will wipe all of your personal settings and take it back to factory default.
For years owners have had issues with the system booting up into a blank (black screen), flickering during use, becoming slow to respond to touch inputs, and randomly rebooting and forgetting all of the user presets.
That's a tough pill to swallow considering that's the only way some Ram owners can control the temperature in their vehicles, connect to their phones, use the vehicle's voice assistant, turn on the radio, check the rear backup camera, or use the built-in navigation.
It also means you can't use the 'SOS' feature in an emergency.
uConnect has a long list of problems and a short list of not-so-desirable solutions. Your best to fix these problems? Turn the car off and start it back up again. Or turn off the car and pull the uConnect fuse. Or turn off the car and hop on your bike instead.
Otherwise you'll be left to deal with these problems:
One of the main complaints about UConnect is how the system freezes up. With a black, unresponsive screen, owners are left without a way to control the radio, navigation, remote locking, climate control, and other important features.
On its own, the system will switch between input sources. So from the radio, to XM, to the USB, and so on. There’s nothing quite like singing along to your favorite song only to have the song suddenly stop so everyone can hear your lovely(?) singing voice.
In February of 2018, FCA sent out an over-the-air software updatethat promptly caused thousands of units to endlessly reboot every 45 seconds or so.
That ... didn't go over well. Especially since some owners say there wasn't even an option to decline the update.
@UconnectCares I despise you with every fiber of my being. Love listening to music in 34 second spurts for the last 2 days. #uconnect@jeep#jeeppic.twitter.com/6vmuv5BNrl
— Melanie Gaston (@mgastonville) February 12, 2018The endless reboots would continue even if the cars were off and the keys were nowhere nearby. That led to a lot of dead batteries and frustrated owners.
The uConnect team acknowledged the update problem on Febraury 13th and tied it to issues with the ever-so-useless SiriusXM Travel Link feature. They also said the problem was regional to the northeast US and Canada and was limited to vehicles with the uConnect 4C NAV and 8.4-inch touchscreen.
Consumer confidence was already pretty low in the uConnect system, but FCA's handling just drove it deeper into the mud.
While the automaker pushed out updated to stop the endless rebooting and said they'd work on a longer-term fix. customers were not impressed with being kept in the dark.
Little or no information was made availabe to owners wondering what the hell was going on. Customers were told to call local dealerships who were just as clueless about the problem or what to do.
A UConnect class-action lawsuit was filed in Kansas in early 2018 after an owner’s defective UConnect system was replaced with, you guessed it, another defective UConnect system.
On June 1, 2016, the dealership replaced the system’s module, allegedly causing the screen to flash back and forth from black to white. Once again the dealership said it had fixed the system, but the screen went black again after the plaintiffs picked up the car.
In July, the dealership again replaced the Uconnect system that allegedly experienced even more issues that prevented the plaintiffs from controlling their heating, air conditioning and navigation.
The lawsuit points to 3 Technical Service Bulletins (TSB) as evidence Chrysler has known about the defects since 2014.
A judge partially granted Chrysler’s motion to dismiss which means this case will continue in Kansas, but not as a nationwide class-action.
This problem has popped up in the following Ram generations.
Most years within a generation share the same parts and manufacturing process. You can also expect them to share the same problems. So while it may not be a problem in every year yet, it's worth looking out for.