Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Redid the tint on the back windows and rear window to limo

58338a8b67a811b95c771d6280be029d.jpg

 

I had to ask. How would you and your passengers get into the truck? The floor must be at least 4' off the ground.

Posted

I had to ask. How would you and your passengers get into the truck? The floor must be at least 4' off the ground.

AMP steps [emoji106]

 

 

Sent from my iPhone 6+

Posted

I agree... looks better with the valance.

 

RT

 

But with a level or a lift, the skirt looks like the truck is doing a curtsy LOL

  • Like 1
Posted

Tried adding some pics through tapatalk, i have no idea if it will work. Had a few minutes to snap some bad pictures. Debadged some of the chrome, rigid lights on n fab light bar, light bar behind the grill, added back up lights, dipped the rims.....more to come.

 

Sent from my SM-G900W8 using Tapatalk

Posted

Tried adding some pics through tapatalk, i have no idea if it will work. Had a few minutes to snap some bad pictures. Debadged some of the chrome, rigid lights on n fab light bar, light bar behind the grill, added back up lights, dipped the rims.....more to come.

 

Sent from my SM-G900W8 using Tapatalk

No excuses, pictures or it didnt happen!! Lol.

 

Cant wait when you have the pictures up!!

Posted (edited)

Made the plunge...sold my 14 and am picking up my 15 today...pics soon!!! :driving:

What made you want to change? Upgraded trim or engine size?

 

 

Sent from my iPhone 6+

Edited by Roidz
Posted

I upgraded for a few reasons. Firstly, our low Canadian dollar means that our used trucks go to your wonderful country for an increased dollar. Secondly, there are a lot of incentives and lo financing. Thirdly, I was off warranty, and lastly I was so ticked at my old seat it was time for a new one...

Posted

I upgraded for a few reasons. Firstly, our low Canadian dollar means that our used trucks go to your wonderful country for an increased dollar. Secondly, there are a lot of incentives and lo financing. Thirdly, I was off warranty, and lastly I was so ticked at my old seat it was time for a new one...

Whats wrong with the seat?

 

Glad to see another albertan on here!!

Posted

Prepare to be jealous, girls.

 

Hood mounted brackets for light pods.

 

Big thanks to the boys of Alternative Off Road in Cali, for the custom work and all it cost me was a bottle of fireball.

 

Note: still in the early stages and as it sits, I might have problems with the antenna interfering with the light pod. Details to follow.

 

attachicon.gifImageUploadedByTapatalk1433992356.382441.jpg

 

attachicon.gifImageUploadedByTapatalk1433992368.972215.jpg

Looks great but I need to see more of these. Was hoping to put mounts like this on. Let's see some pictures of the lights on the mounts also

 

Sent from my XT1080 using Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Posted

Got my front windows tinted and put in some Weather Tech mats. Next up is a Roll-N-Lock A-series and Airaid MIT.

 

image_zpsqvaj880f.jpgimage_zps3hdnmk9f.jpg

  • Like 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • Batteries don’t always show signs of a few years ago my vehicle started fine in the morning and took me to work. After work the battery was completely dead and I needed a jump. No, I didn’t leave anything on and the battery was only a couple months old. It was replaced under warranty. 
    • AFM is confirmed in the Corvette engine, so I'm assuming the higher volume trucks will get it as well
    • If his battery was that bad I would think it would have been showing signs before this that were ignored. Stinks that it happened the way it did in rush hour traffic, but this seems like a pretty fringe scenario. I don't mind it that bad and never turn it off. The only slight annoyance for me is the slight delay between brake to gas, but I have gotten used to it and figure if it can save a little gas why not.
    • That is a good correction. I think “severity” was probably the wrong word for what I meant. What I really mean is closer to event priority, relevance, and actionability — not “this code is severe” or “replace this part.” I agree that a truck can have a lot of trivial or historical communication codes, and if the product starts pushing alerts for every stored or low-value event, people will ignore it very quickly. So the alert logic would need to be filtered. For example, I would not want a random old communication code to generate a push notification by itself. A useful alert would probably need to be based on things like: - new vs historical - active vs stored - repeated vs one-time - duration of the event - whether it happened near the driver-marked symptom - whether it happened together with voltage drop, reset, bus-off, misfire, oil-pressure change, etc. - whether the same pattern repeats under similar conditions So instead of saying “severity,” maybe the product should organize events by affected system and priority. For example: Misfire event: Show misfire counts / roughness first, then fuel trims, RPM/load, DFM/AFM state if available, coolant/oil temp, voltage, and related DTCs. Oil-pressure event: Show oil pressure first, but only in context — RPM, load, oil temperature, coolant temperature, DFM/AFM state if available, voltage, and baseline comparison. Communication event: Show which module/network/message dropped, whether voltage dropped, whether the recorder reset, whether it was active or historical, and whether it repeated. Voltage/reset event: Show battery voltage, crank/wake/sleep state, module reset, communication dropouts, and what came back online first. That also solves the display-order problem you mentioned. The main report should not always show the same fixed list first. It should show the system that appears abnormal first, and then the supporting values for that system. I also agree that the truck already has an oil pressure gauge and MIL. The point would not be to duplicate those. The value would be in showing what else was happening before and after the warning or symptom. For example, if the MIL comes on for a misfire, the truck already told the driver there is a problem. The useful part would be: - which cylinder or bank looked abnormal first - whether it happened after an AFM/DFM transition - whether fuel trims were already moving - whether oil pressure or voltage changed at the same time - whether the same pattern happened previously without a MIL On the OBD port point, I think you may be right for a consumer-facing version. OBD is much easier for the average owner: - easier install - easier removal - inside the cabin - easier phone connection - easier data download - easier to include a pass-through port for another scanner OBD is also the right place for DTCs, freeze frame, VIN, calibration information, Mode 6, and normal scan-tool parameters. The reason I was looking at ECM-side recording is that some events may be gone by the time someone plugs in a scanner, and some powertrain-side network evidence may not be available the same way through the DLC. But I agree that if an OBD-based version can capture enough useful evidence for most owners, that is probably the cleaner consumer product. Maybe the split is: - OBD/DLC version for most consumers - ECM-side version only if it proves it adds evidence that the OBD version cannot get - shop/pro version if deeper powertrain-side event evidence is actually useful So I would not want to force the inline approach if the OBD workflow solves most of the real-world problem. Your last point is probably the key product requirement: the report should be specific to the system showing the abnormality. Not “here are 50 parameters.” More like: “Misfire-related event detected. Here are the misfire/fuel/DFM/context values.” or “Oil-pressure-related event detected. Here is oil pressure compared with RPM/load/temp/baseline.” or “Communication event detected. Here is what dropped, when, and whether voltage/reset happened first.” That is a much better way to think about the report.
    • It was all part of the tiny bit of fuel savings it goes towards what was mandated by the government. Much like cylinder deactivation. That was relaxed by the recent administration. All that doesn’t help the individual buyer. But as a whole helps the manufacturer to try to reach the previous ridiculous past mileage per gallon mandate. So yes it was mandated and added cost to the vehicle. 
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...