Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

They can redesign the peddle all they want, but it's futile if they keep mounting it to a flimsy piece of plastic.

 

Isn't that one of the signs of insanity, doing the same thing over and over, expecting different results each time?

:)

Edited by John K.
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

After some investigating my 2016 doesn't seem to have the flex mentioned here.

Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk

Posted
13 minutes ago, m3n00b said:

After some investigating my 2016 doesn't seem to have the flex mentioned here.

Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
 

Yours must be an exception to the rule.

My boss just purchased a new 2018 LTZ and he has already shimmed it.

From what I understand on the 2019 Forum, the throttle response is crisp

and instant on the new T1 trucks, with no flex. So maybe the engineers do listen to us here... :)

  • Like 1
Posted
Yours must be an exception to the rule.
My boss just purchased a new 2018 LTZ and he has already shimmed it.
From what I understand on the 2019 Forum, the throttle response is crisp
and instant on the new T1 trucks, with no flex. So maybe the engineers do listen to us here... [emoji4]
Strange. I wiggled the bracket and the pedal. There's some side to side play but none when you depress the pedal. Also was having trouble finding where I would put the shim on my adjustable pedals. Do I need to take everything off?

Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk

Posted

There is play side to side but the issue is front to back.

If you look on the firewall, you will see where the entire pedal assembly is attached there

with a large nut over a square piece of plastic or metal bracket (depending on trim level)

See below. The shim goes behind this nut and bracket. Hard to get to and you have to peel carpet back.

The arrow in the left pic shows where the shim goes.

 

image.png.2651e4756eb5017405d0144b3276dc64.png        image.png.cd8daf3cb2794aba363161c322b27e66.png

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

I just did this on my 6.2 with power adjustable pedals, and all I can say is, Wow I am a believer. My pedal was always lazy feeling. Well, I practically chirped the tires pulling out of my driveway. It literally feels like a free tune.

  • Like 1
Posted
On ‎9‎/‎29‎/‎2018 at 9:00 PM, NWI Denali said:

I just did this on my 6.2 with power adjustable pedals, and all I can say is, Wow I am a believer. My pedal was always lazy feeling. Well, I practically chirped the tires pulling out of my driveway. It literally feels like a free tune.

It is a FREE TUNE ! :cheers:

Posted

Oh, that we could so easily jam one in the AFM/DOD so easily.  And not to forget the new Stop/Start feature on the newest trucks!

Posted

I have adjustable pedals on my 15 Sierra 1500 and I checked the “slack” in the pedal the other day and didn’t feel not see really any. Is the am I missing something or am i just a lucky one without any problems?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Posted

I have the adjustable pedals also.....slack is not in the pedal, but in the plastic carrier below the pedals are mounted on  an is not directly touching the firewall. Hard to see if you have the extra thick rug pad, and harder to slip a shim under it, easy to see by and install the shim by pulling up on the flexible plastic base

 

Sorry I waited 2 years to try it....what a dramatic difference it makes

Posted

Oh ok. When I tested my pedal with my hand, I was looking at the plastic bracket and didn’t see much movement if any. I’ll have to try this again and see what I come up with.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Posted

I did this a couple weeks ago, with a composite shim stuck behind there.  Definite improvement with throttle response.

 

As a mechanical engineer, I tried to wrap my head around why they designed it the way they did.  My best guess is to dampen vibrations.  With the shim, I can definitely feel more vibration in the go pedal compared to floating from the factory.  I might try replacing the shim with a dampener of some sort, see if I can get some of the road feedback down.

Posted

When I first got my truck, I was having a hard time getting the truck to pull off the line smoothly.  This thread proved to be helpful.  There was definitely significant flex in the assembly.  The first bit of pedal movement did not yield any actual throttle input / response. 

 

I jammed a piece of paint stick behind the assembly, but managed to crack the paint stick when stomping on the pedal.  Whoops.  lol

 

I then chucked a small plastic bicycle tire lever behind the assembly.  It has held up fine, and makes the throttle response much more to my satisfaction. 

Posted
On 10/1/2018 at 9:48 AM, BigBlueLB756 said:

Oh, that we could so easily jam one in the AFM/DOD so easily.  And not to forget the new Stop/Start feature on the newest trucks!

Start stop doesn't bother me, actually saves gas when stopped a a RR crossing with a triple header pulling 200 coal cars.

 

No override switch in the '18 Traverse or Malibu but easy enough to defeat switch to "M" or "L" and click to maximum gear , eg. L9 in the Traverse L6 in the Malibu and no more start stop for the rest of the drive cycle.

 

Use the Silverado now only for heavy work.....the '18 Traverse amazes the crap out of me, a whole different model compared to my '15. All the high tech goodies with on the fly 2WD/AWD 310 hp V6 that 0-60 in 6 sec and gets 29-30 mpg (yes, 30 mpg ) on the highway in 8th and 9th overdrive ears, mill is turning 1800 rpm at 70 mph and drops multiple gears so it still has plenty of steam at highways speeds. Four comfortable buckets plus a three seat bench for Moe Larry and Curly. Handles like a cat and climbs hills like a goat, new high performance torque convertor and improved low gear clutches in the tranny. Acoustic glass and active noise cancellation for a quiet ride. Equipped with radar, front, rear and side HD cameras (even has a camera washer for the rear)and 8" screen with night vision it synthesizes a top down view of the vehicle and surroundings....electronic wide angle rearview mirror so no heads blocking the rear window..you can black out all the windows and still drive the car! D optic LED headlights with no more shutters so both high and low beams operate simultaneously on high. Pedestrian alert and auto braking can spot a deer at dusk and give me half a chance of avoiding collision with those road rats. There's even a gremlin hiding in the Nav head that auto zooms the map and duplicates turning directions in the 4" speedo display as you approach as turn/turnoff. New multi link rear suspension squats on a hard stop so no nose diving or pitching in turns. Damn thing is more fun to drive than my old Camaro, a sports car when I'm in and a family car when the wife is riding shotgun without being a cop magnet! It is physically larger than the Tahoe and downsized GMC Acadia and goes for $15K less than an equivalent Tahoe. Took Chevy 10 years to redesign the Traverse and though the new ones bear the nameplate it is a completely different animal, only parts in common with the gen1 are the lug nuts. Looks good in the Redline blackout version with all around LEDs. Sorry to go on about this but I'm amazed every time I get into it.......this is the finest driving Chevy I have driven in 50 years of driving.....even better than my '74 Impala Custom 454 that got 6 mpg.!

 

Anyone in the market for a Tahoe or Suburban should take a look at the 2nd gen Traverse first.

DSCN0232.JPG

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

    • You have to have the last word. 
    • I am sure that was quite the pass experience and not a great place to experience during the winter when the conditions are not good. I've seen video of that pass and also more detailed information and pictures about the wrecks at that one hair pin turn where tractor trailers have flown right off the cliff and I am sure from all the warning signs that you know the exact curve that was !. After all there is a reason why a song was made about Wolf Creek Pass !. By the way and I didn't realize this either when I bought my truck as its nothing I even thought of that would be programmed into the cruise control and this occurs in either the basic or the more advanced cruise that controls your distance behind a vehicle and that is the brakes going down a hill are being applied as soon as the vehicle goes a certain speed over the set cruise speed. While it certainly does force downshifts in the transmission as you found out with cruise on while going down hill, its also dragging the brakes as needed to keep the speed controlled to what the cruise was set to. For me, I find that unsettling simply because I have no concept then as to how MUCH brake input is being used a and just how hot are those brakes getting and the wear factor as well. I can see that system getting a person into trouble on long mountain grades while pulling a trailer as it would not only be standing on the brakes of the pickup without any driver input, it would also be automatically applying the trailer brakes and it could cause a run away unit by overheating the brakes. Its one thing on a shorter hill and if the driver allows it to do its thing but on a long mountain grade is where things could get so out of hand. As someone a while back on this forum said, they had someone following them at night I believe on a down grade and had the cruise set and the person behind them could see the brake lights being energized all the way down the hill. I figured when I saw your comment that you didn't know and would have no way of knowing that your truck was applying the brakes and that you would and rightfully so assume you only used the brakes when you pressed on the pedal to slow down more than the cruise set speed for the slower sharp curves. So its good knowledge to know this about the newer GM trucks, certainly when doing any descending on long mountain grades. In the future try kicking off the cruise and use the the manual mode on a pass to see what that is like as I know myself when I first experienced it I thought no way can this engine be holding me back this well and tried the same hill in manual mode and sure enough the engine was revving way up and still could not hold the trucks speed down like it could in cruise mode.    Fuel mileage, that is where a really low sleek type of car can do better at higher speeds, certainly it starts sucking fuel too but a tall pickup is pushing massive amounts of air and also allowing a lot more air under it and the tow mirrors as in elephant ears pushing through the wind  as well. Driving like grandpa is about as good as one can do when driving one of these if trying to get the best fuel economy they can. I bet these trucks would get the best mileage they can if driven on a freeway in Florida if not busy traffic at a sedate speed and that sea level elevation without hills, vastly different then Colorado !. 
    • It’s over for almost 24 hours. Are you playing Eddie Haskell? 
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...