Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

I have received the new coil springs from Sterling spring supplier for my car, and I am going to put them in soon. Have you tried their products, guys? They seem pretty good

Posted

Looks great, nice work! I vaguely remember the Z71 gauge being some sort of OBDII monitor , whats the other one for?

 

Also- any info on the pedals?

installed!! :D

20161011_163820_zpsypg3zwti.jpg

 

20161011_163904_zpsn9twiizx.jpg

Posted

Looks great, nice work! I vaguely remember the Z71 gauge being some sort of OBDII monitor , whats the other one for?

 

Also- any info on the pedals?

 

Not sure what I want to do with the other gauge.

As for the pedals. Last one open box here: http://www.ebay.com/itm/Open-Box-Putco-932180-Pedal-Pad-/222278580353?hash=item33c0d5f881:g:WksAAOSwmLlX~TYL&vxp=mtr

Or brand new here: http://www.ebay.com/itm/Textured-Aluminum-Replacement-Pedals-for-2007-2016-Chevy-Silverado-by-PUTCO-/152272654517?hash=item23742850b5:g:7IgAAOSwNRdX9t4V&vxp=mtr

  • Like 1
Posted

I had my flapper valve on the exhaust removed and that sucker in pretty darn loud in the cab. So much so I'm probably going to have it welded back on tomorrow. I wouldn't think it'd be that loud with a 22" Magnaflow but it is........ I'm sure slot of you are thinking " no way" but it is too loud for me in the cab. Sounds great outside. Am I getting too old? Haha !

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Posted (edited)

Had my K2 serviced and recalls fixed seatbelt, airbag reprogramed . Everybody will hear the sweet sound of the Corsa when I cruise up to Iowa this weekend.

post-145950-0-22993400-1476229622_thumb.png

 

 

post-145950-0-22993400-1476229622_thumb.png

post-145950-0-22993400-1476229622_thumb.png

post-145950-0-22993400-1476229622_thumb.png

Edited by Trucker Jeff
  • Like 1
Posted

Today I decided To tighten my U-BOLTS. They were super loose. Think the min I turned was half a turn the most was just about 3 full turns! My rearend doesnt make that weird clunky/squeaky sound anymore.

Yes I used a torque wrench. Lol

Posted

Today I decided To tighten my U-BOLTS. They were super loose. Think the min I turned was half a turn the most was just about 3 full turns! My rearend doesnt make that weird clunky/squeaky sound anymore.

Yes I used a torque wrench. Lol

Yeah unfortunately more than a few guys have had to do the same thing. Glad you got it taken care of tho and you used that German torque wrench to make sure everything's "gutentite" LOL

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  • Like 2
Posted

Yeah unfortunately more than a few guys have had to do the same thing. Glad you got it taken care of tho and you used that German torque wrench to make sure everything's "gutentite" LOL

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

I'll have to check this on mine. Mine didn't squeak before my new rear leaf springs. Now it squeaks a little.

 

Sent from my SM-G930V using Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Posted

Mobile Phone holder installed today with USB Cable routed into the glove box USB Input.

 

883cdaac1402a0186165e8fa2098630e.jpg

  • Like 2
Posted

18% tint on all windows and led reverse/cargo lamps yesterday.

Aem drop in air filter today.

Airaid intake tube tomorrow.

  • Like 2
Posted

Installed some Roadwire leather ad4d82d4284d86609507003d0fb1419f.jpg

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Nice man, looks good. How's the quality? And if you don't mind me asking how much was it? And did you install it yourself?

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  • Like 2
Posted

Nice man, looks good. How's the quality? And if you don't mind me asking how much was it? And did you install it yourself?

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

I think it was $800 or $850 I have had it in for about 4 months, just got around to posting it. I did install it myself and it sucked. So far i love it. I had katzkin in my last truck which was good and was way easier to install. Basically the roadwire leather is a lot tighter than the katzkin I had in my 2007 sierra and my hands hurt for days after installing it. The right tools would have probably helped!

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  • 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

    • tl; dr I've now reached the 6th floor of hell. I'm chronicling my journey for my morning readers.   Pulling the top of the intake apart was moderately easy but it involved a lot of parts, connections, and minutae. I was preparing for the new fuel lines to arrive ("nut and bolt kit" it's called). The fuel line connections are notched and held in place by the manifold and a metal plate with a T27 screw.   It's on the back of the intake, under the firewall, with little clearance, and two hard metal fuel lines in the way. I was using Franken-tools (weird combinations of 1/4 inch ratchet with/without an extension, with a bit holder for my T27) to get in there. One of my sockets and bits fell off and has yet to emerge on the floor. I lost a second setup and that's when I almost started throwing tools. But that was the point at which I had gotten traction on the Torx head, and it promptly stripped. No more traction.   I started humming "1-877-kars-4-kids" because I was about at that point. You know what? I'm $1500 into this thing and I can make it disappear just as quickly. This isn't fun anymore. I had spent a lot of time already "tidying" around the engine bay: Fixing all the "someone's been here before!" BS. The truck has been exclusively dealer- and shop- serviced and I'm reminded of why I never let other people work on my cars unless absolutely necessary.   Speaking of dealer service. This truck has a 1" stack of records going back to 1995. I put them all in an excel spreadsheet, date/mileage/description.   The CPI spider has been replaced 4 times in 85k miles. The EGR? Another 4. Multiple, multiple O2 sensors. One Cat. 4? Sets of plugs and wires, and I swear half the stack is diagnosis paperwork for "misfire, runs rough, extended crank, dies at stoplights".   GM was producing some proper crap back then. And it was still well within the era of brittle/crappy plastic. (Windows 95 was released the same month this truck was sold new, we HAD the technology!!)   There (was) a plastic shroud around the evaporator core and HVAC fan in the engine bay. I noticed a chunk of it missing so I poked at it some more and it literally shattered. Touched it some more and pieces were crumbling off. Had a good laugh. Clearly whatever plastic garbage they were using had broken down over 30 years and was literally turning to dust. That was a good half hour of using a shop vac to remove the rest of it.   Back to it.   I was going to give up for the evening but then decided I'm already level 10 pissed off at the stripped screw: G* D* it, give me my tools back -- and my JOY. We'll do this the hard way: The whole intake is coming off.   Blazer won Round II. After finally finding and accessing the 12 intake bolts and using a pry bar to unseat it from the heads, it popped loose in an explosion of gunk and grime raining down into open ports. Awesome.   6 times I reminded myself: Be careful of the temperature sender on the front of the intake.   YEAH, I forgot again and snapped it clean off in the removal. Add another $20 to the ever-growing list of new parts this thing is consuming.   The shame is, long before removing the intake, I had changed the oil in prep for Tuesday's momentous fuel line replacement that was going to be the magic fix and I'd have a running Blazer to tool around in this next weekend. The intake removal, including raining gunk, also gushed dirty coolant all over the valley. Of course it did. Welp, there goes another $35.   I now need an intake gasket set, bolt set, coolant temp sensor, another 5 quarts of oil, some RTV. Don't worry, I've already got 3 new jugs of Dexcool and a thermostat waiting. I'll fill it with clean water first to get it running, dump it, and then add the Dex later on in case... well, let's not go there. I'm only tearing this down once, next time the truck is going on Marketplace for FREE.   Oh, and I'm going to need vacuum hose for all the stupid connections placed at the rear of the engine which have since disintegrated. Come on, GM....tell me you don't do that anymore?   Oh, and the ears on the distributor where the cap screws down are both cracked. I mean, why not put a new distributor in it too. You get a distributor, YOU get a distributor, Everyone gets a new distributor!   This truck isn't out of the woods yet...I'm already questioning how much more time I'm willing to sink in.
    • NewDude, thank you for the suggestions!    I did follow up and the dealer indicates he has an open CX case and is working with DPAC (Dealer Parts Assistance Center).   Per the dealer, GM has had a quality spill and is not providing an update for when a replacement engine will be available.
    • That's interesting.   There was a factory wire-hole in the back, top of the rear cab, which had a wire for the third brakelight assembly running through it, as well as several holes (10 of them I believe) for all of the studs coming off of the 3rd brakelight assembly itself.   I sealed all of those holes with RTV/silicone as well.   I found it kind of odd, that none of those holes, were sealed with any kind of sealant by the factory - if there was any there, it wasn't very much.   That said, I've been out in heavy rain and have ran the truck through high-pressure car-washes a few times now and she has been 100% water-tight to this point.   I feel very confident in the repair, we'll see how it holds up.
    • I bought a used 2022 2500hd with 6.6L in February. In March took a 2200 mile trip towing our 6500 lb trailer. Changed the oil day before leaving and when we were arriving at our 1st destination, low oil light came on (roughly 1000 miles) it was 2 qts low. Now it towed like a dream, no issue there, and we did go through the mountains of TN, but still, 2 qts! Luckily I did purchase an extended warranty. Brought it to the dealership in April, oil change and consumption test. Brought it back last week, 1300 miles, no towing, and no oil showing on the dipstick. GM is reccomending a new engine (cheaper than them rebuilding), we'll see if the warranty company comes through. 
    • T3's and Ibuprofen. I do have a cryotherapy unit (ice machine) and a lift chair that will allow me to raise my legs above my heart.  There are topicals that I can use once the wound is fully healed.  
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...