Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Has anyone tried to adjust the rear glass yet with ant success

I adjusted the lift gate stops and applied pressure to the glass while the vehicle was being driven at the sweet spot speeds. Not an issue, at least for me.

 

One thing I have noticed that others have early on in this thread is that it seems to have gotten worse with the colder temperatures. We're hovering around the freezing mark these days and it feels like the booming is worse.

 

IMHO, the booming is caused by vibrations in the rear drivetrain. It's the same boom sound that one can hear when driving slowly over expansion joints, curbs or gravel roads - only repeated and only at two speed ranges.

Posted (edited)

Has anyone tried to adjust the rear glass yet with ant success

 

my rear glass is super tight....and to confirm this, there's no wind noise around glass when moving. And yes I'm dealing with the horrible buffeting/pressure issue.

Edited by ajs800
Posted

I adjusted the lift gate stops and applied pressure to the glass while the vehicle was being driven at the sweet spot speeds. Not an issue, at least for me.

 

One thing I have noticed that others have early on in this thread is that it seems to have gotten worse with the colder temperatures. We're hovering around the freezing mark these days and it feels like the booming is worse.

 

IMHO, the booming is caused by vibrations in the rear drivetrain. It's the same boom sound that one can hear when driving slowly over expansion joints, curbs or gravel roads - only repeated and only at two speed ranges.

 

If the road or, for example unbalanced tires, are inducing the booming, the colder and thus thicker shock fluid will effectively stiffen the suspension's response to sharp inputs and thus excite things like the roof more.

 

Frank

Posted

This is my first post but I have monitored this forum for the last few months. My 2016 Yukon XL Denali will be going back to the dealer tomorrow through the GM buyback process. We tried to make it work but our Yukon had vibrations and the buffeting to the point where it could not be driven except for short trips. (1800 miles in 4 months) The dealer did successfully road force the tires after going through 6 tires with numbers <5. Still had the vibrations and started the buyback process. Service and salesman were unaware of the issue till I brought it up and showed them this forum. They all felt the vibrations and buffeting. I drove roughly 8-10 other vehicles trying to find a good one only finding one that was acceptable but did not want to take a chance of future problems down the road.(wrong color interior and exterior also) These are great vehicles. It is very unfortunate that they have these issues. Dealer sales and service did go out of the way to help me. I did not have the dealer service department do anymore than the tires. I will drive my new 2016 Sierra 6.2 replacement vehicle until GM decides to reengineer the Yukon.

Posted

I adjusted the lift gate stops and applied pressure to the glass while the vehicle was being driven at the sweet spot speeds. Not an issue, at least for me.

One thing I have noticed that others have early on in this thread is that it seems to have gotten worse with the colder temperatures. We're hovering around the freezing mark these days and it feels like the booming is worse.

IMHO, the booming is caused by vibrations in the rear drivetrain. It's the same boom sound that one can hear when driving slowly over expansion joints, curbs or gravel roads - only repeated and only at two speed ranges.

I adjusted the lift gate stops and applied pressure to the glass while the vehicle was being driven at the sweet spot speeds. Not an issue, at least for me.

One thing I have noticed that others have early on in this thread is that it seems to have gotten worse with the colder temperatures. We're hovering around the freezing mark these days and it feels like the booming is worse.

IMHO, the booming is caused by vibrations in the rear drivetrain. It's the same boom sound that one can hear when driving slowly over expansion joints, curbs or gravel roads - only repeated and only at two speed ranges.

Did you do the roof test? To see if the bows came loose
Posted

Did you do the roof test? To see if the bows came loose

 

No. The dealership has road-forced balanced all 4 tires, replaced 2 and we're now waiting for a complete axle replacement. They're after the vibration which can be felt and likely measured with their scope since they approved a new axle.

Posted (edited)

Well, just got an update from the dealer. After a week of working on it to ensure that the required PI from GM was followed to the letter, the tech drove it this afternoon and the buffetting was still there at 40-45. They did say that the issue at 65-70 was gone, but that was never as bad to begin with.

 

I am so disgusted right now it is not even funny.

Edited by Zig10
Posted

Well, just got an update from the dealer. After a week of working on it to ensure that the required PI from GM was followed to the letter, the tech drove it this afternoon and the buffetting was still there at 40-45. They did say that the issue at 65-70 was gone, but that was never as bad to begin with.

I am so disgusted right now it is not even funny.

Did that include the roof ?
Posted

Yup.

 

That drone at 45MPH is likely due to the engine's control strategy that upshifts to the tallest gear, switches to V4 mode, and lugs the engine at 1000-1050RPM. Fuel economy is outstanding but the lugging engine makes the vehicle drone. I do not think this is an exhaust issue. I think GM will need to design a more insulative engine mount or change the strategy to shift up a gear and the engine spinning a little faster.

 

Frank

Posted

The drone was a separate sound, and one I am familiar and ok with. One of my business partners bought a new Tahoe about 2 days before I got my Yukon. I drove his against mine back-to-back to see if the buffetting was there. His was fine. There was some drone in 4 cylinder mode, but no pressure sensation at all.

Posted

The drone was a separate sound, and one I am familiar and ok with. One of my business partners bought a new Tahoe about 2 days before I got my Yukon. I drove his against mine back-to-back to see if the buffetting was there. His was fine. There was some drone in 4 cylinder mode, but no pressure sensation at all.

When test driving how long would it take before you notice this problem, is it right away?

Posted

When test driving how long would it take before you notice this problem, is it right away?

I'd notice it right away too, at the sweet spot speeds and driving over expansion joints. Ditto on the exhaust drone - that's a distinctly different tone which isn't annoying as hell.

 

 

If the booming isn't across all vehicles, it's less likely a design flaw and instead defective part(s) or improperly installed parts. Somebody must be able to solve this!

 

I'd love to be able to visually inspect the underside of the truck while it runs at ~65mph.

Posted

When test driving how long would it take before you notice this problem, is it right away?

Within about 10 seconds of hitting 40-45. Normally it's jsu an annoyance, but if you have a cold with any kind of sinus pressure it becomes pain-inducing in your ears...or at least in mine. My family has been passing around a head cold for the past 20 days or so, and I haven't been able to drive that car for more than a 5 minute trip to the store and back.

 

The loaner they gave me is a base-model V6 Sierra SLE pickup. It drives pretty poorly and doesn't have enough power to get out of it's own way, but no pressure issues of vibrations of any kind.

 

Sad that I am making payments on a $70k vehicle, stuck driving a $45k vehicle, and somehow this is a better driving experience. How in the hell does GM think that this is acceptable in any way?

Posted

I'd notice it right away too, at the sweet spot speeds and driving over expansion joints. Ditto on the exhaust drone - that's a distinctly different tone which isn't annoying as hell.

 

 

If the booming isn't across all vehicles, it's less likely a design flaw and instead defective part(s) or improperly installed parts. Somebody must be able to solve this!

 

I'd love to be able to visually inspect the underside of the truck while it runs at ~65mph.

Anybody got a GoPro and a good magnet?

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
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    250.4k
    Total Topics
    2.7m
    Total Posts
  • Member Statistics

    342,760
    Total Members
    8,960
    Most Online
    MASONV88888888
    Newest Member
    MASONV88888888
    Joined
  • Who's Online   1 Member, 0 Anonymous, 1,532 Guests (See full list)


  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • I’m definitely interested to hear the end result here. 
    • My 2025 Silverado 1500 had to receive a brand-new engine (long block) under warranty last month at only around 16,500 miles. Before the replacement, the truck repeatedly displayed "Engine Oil Level Low" warnings, even though the Oil Life Monitor still showed around 50% remaining after about 6,000 miles since my last oil change. After seeing the warning several times, I checked the dipstick with the engine cold, and the oil level was completely normal. The next day, the message escalated to "Add Engine Oil." At first, I assumed it was just a faulty oil level sensor, so I brought the truck to the dealership. After inspecting the engine, they found internal cylinder wall scoring and ultimately replaced the entire long block under warranty. Before this happened, I was planning to install a 4-inch lift and suspension upgrade on my truck. After needing a new engine at just 16,500 miles, I honestly don't see the point anymore. I also contacted GM to ask whether my vehicle qualified for a buyback, but I was informed that it does not at this time. Anyway, this experience has left me with serious concerns about the long-term reliability of this engine. I sincerely hope NHTSA expands the current investigation or recall to include 2025 model and performs a thorough inspection of affected vehicles. My biggest concern is that these engines may fail shortly after the powertrain warranty expires. If GM truly stands behind this engine, then at the very least, please consider extending the powertrain warranty to 10 years for affected owners. That would go a long way toward restoring customer confidence.
    • Without exception but then I'm the odd duck, right? I know what goes into that test, how it is calculated and thus how to beat it. But EPA values are often not beaten by the general public and the government has in past years adjusted the means and methods to come to those values to more closely approximate "Joe Average".    The only real trick to beating that EPA average is don't drive like "Joe Average".    It's the same method you used to profit from "Economic Migration" and in doing so beat the 'stats'. But you, like me, are not "Joe Average".     The thing you don't seem to grasp is this "Purchasing Power Index" isn't forward looking. It doesn't predict what it going to be but looks backward and states what it was. They are not telling us what the THINK, they are telling us what they MEASURED. Example:    Wife says "I'm going to lose 40 pounds by Christmas". May she does, maybe she doesn't but the doctors office who weighed her when she made that statement and again at Christmas only REPORTS what the RESULT was. You and I can banter about what was possible and what aunt Tilly did till the cows come home but the result is the result. Arguing otherwise is.....irrational. That's all I'm saying. This isn't about:      What you are calling a 'Statistic' is a RESULT not a CALCUATION and as a result the RULE. Like gravity as a rule, it can not be broken. 
    • Just wanted to say thank you for posting this. Years later, your thread is still helping Silverado owners.   I bought my 2025 Silverado 1500 in January 2025, and I've had what feels like the exact same rattle since day one. After reading your findings, I believe my truck has the same issue with the cable carrier contacting the rear sliding window. To be honest, I had pretty much given up on pursuing the issue. It wasn't until I recently drove another brand's pickup that I realized just how quiet their cabin was—and how noisy mine has been all along. On my truck, the rattle happens on almost any paved road, gets even worse on rougher pavement, and I can even hear it during braking and acceleration.   I actually referenced your thread when submitting my case to GM, hoping they'll recognize this as a recurring issue instead of treating it as an isolated incident. The reason I reached out to GM first is because my dealership told me they would need to keep the truck for at least two days just to diagnose the problem. I was concerned that even after two days, they still might not be able to identify the source of the rattle before giving the truck back to me. I had also asked a few dealerships about this issue during previous service visits, but none of them seemed to know what was causing it or had a solution. That's why I decided to contact GM directly first, hoping they might already have an official repair procedure or guidance for this issue.   I also hope GM eventually comes up with an official fix for this problem. I have a feeling there are many Silverado owners experiencing the same rattle, but most either choose to live with it or simply don't know what the cause is.   Really appreciate you taking the time to document your diagnosis. Your post is still making a difference years later.
    • I have 2 choices. 
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...