Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

I have the soot at the muffle drain weep hole too. I think it's normal. My truck isn't too bad - I really can't hear it when the windows are rolled up and the radio is on. I just put it in M5 when I'm driving around with the windows down. The truck doesn't use the V4-V8 system when in M5.

Posted

Does anyone know if the gm aftermarket performance exhaust that has the flapper valve makes this same noise too? I was thinking about upgrading but not if it makes the same squeak/chirp

Posted

I'm having the same problem with my 2016. I brought it up at my first oil change and the service guy told me "yeah thats how they sound"....so I spoke with GM Customer Care and told them about the exhaust. They reached out to my local dealer who ordered the 'lubrication' fix for the flapper. Well, it did nothing to correct the problem. In fact, my flapper valve stuck in the closed position and I got horrible fuel economy. I chewed thru a tank of 92 octane in less than a week (I usually go 2 to 3 weeks on a tank). I suspected the flapper was stuck so I got under the truck and sure enough I had a hard time opening the flapper by hand. Once I got it to move, it started to work again....for a couple days....then it stuck again....so every couple days before I leave for work, I lay a blanket on the ground and manually open/close the flapper to make sure it doesn't get stuck. This is a serious pain in the asphalt!!!! I cannot even fathom sitting down with my wife and trying to explain to her that we need to spend $1000+ on aftermarket exhaust....

 

I know to some of you, the noise is not a big deal. To me it is. I am really starting to regret selling my Ram...

  • Like 1
Posted

did you try clamping the flapper open? what was the "lubrication fix"? hadn't heard about that yet. Thankfully I can only hear the squeak with the windows open, so the 7 months a year it snows here, it wont be an issue.

Posted

I tried figuring how to clamp it so it would stay 25% open but still open 100% when u get in throttle. It won't work. It's 2 rotating squares so if you pin it partially open, when it rotates it will keep it from opening all the way.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

terrible design.....and I've been waiting almost a month for GM rep Julianne to respond to my private messages.

Posted

I have had mine clamped open for a week. My computer MPG avg is 2 MPG less than what I have been getting. Not sure if it's related to the flapper valve being clamped open

Posted

There is supposed to be an upgraded flapper valve that replaces the original. I have sent several messages to the GM Customer Care rep who was working with my dealer on this issue. It's been over a month and they are not responding to my messages.

 

I'm about to trade this truck in on a Ford and be done with this.

Posted

Fixed mine with a HyperTech Max energy 2.0 part 2000 hand held programmer. It has an option to set the AFM to only come on above whatever speed you set. I am currently using 50mph so no V4 below 50mph so far i see NO change in fuel mileage with the change. My issue was that with my dual exhaust at low speeds when it changed to V4 it sounded like a helicopter had landed on my tailgate. Not noticeable at higher speeds above 50mph I may set it a bit lower maybe to 40mph do not know yet.

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

    • I see some red flags.   - No mention in the Carfax if the oil pump belt was changed.  LM2s had a 150,000mi service interval, and its got 164,245mi on it.   - If something happens to the transmission valve body, the special coverage is expired by mileage.  That will likely be an out of pocket expense, with zero or near zero GM participation if something happened even though its in by time.   - 2020 LM2s seem to need timing chains after 80,000mi at some point.  They fixed this end of 2020/starting 2021 model year engines.     - Long oil change intervals.  7,000-8,000mi on average, probably close to 0% or perhaps to or beyond 0% on the OLM.  Lots of them not at the dealer which makes me wonder how much of the oil ran through that truck was the proper Dexos D rated 0w20 oil and not just gas engine 0w20, which is not the same at all.     - Long fuel filter changes, again likely taking the fuel filter life to 0% or more.  First one went 28,603, second was done 43,094 miles later at 71,697, from there another 46,452mi to 118,149mi, and then the most recent one 37,026mi later at 155,175mi.  So counting its original fuel filter, its had only 4 fuel filters on it.  No bueno IMO.     Good news?    - It has had only two warranty trips to the dealer.  The first free service (end of December 2020 on the Carfax), and the transmission reprogram recall (end of August 2025 on the Carfax).     - Truck did a LOT of moving, so that might explain the lack of emissions related repairs like bad NOX sensors, bad exhaust temp sensors, bad glow plugs, etc.     The "emissions system checked" could just be how something was flagged for Carfax.  GM dealers have to do SAVI reports for warranty repair orders so they scan the truck.  So its possible that is there for that?  
    • Thank you, @Z45!   NOTE - No all repair shop/Dealers reports to Carfax   That is my main concern.  The CARFAX looks way too clean for a 6 year old anything with 164,245 miles.  Even something known for reliability (like many Toyotas) typically has a lot more replaced, like a Nav screen, interior trim, shock/strut, or brake pads.  And surely the last set of tires (installed at ~58k miles) would be bald unless those were all highway miles.   I'm tempted to pay a local dealer to look up the VIN, but am not sure if that will be worthwhile.  Last time I did this, it was 100% useless, and I felt scammed - they noted the bumper was replaced years ago and that's it.  A 5-year old could spot the accident damage, even though nothing was on the CARFAX.   After giving the dealer a call, the truck may have a hard shift, but they have to verify with their mechanic if that's even a concern.  And I've test driven about a dozen of these now, many near Chicago, and half the trucks shift hard/odd at all throttle positions.  The ones with aftermarket lifts/larger tires shift terrible, and 3 stock trucks shifted so violently I thought the transmission valve body was going out.   At this point I'm conflicted, as I need a vehicle, and am coming up short locally.  Northern trucks in this price range tend to have either multiple owners, a lot of mods (lifts/oversized tires without re-gearing), and are generally in rougher shape.   If this truck showed up in your neighborhood for $27k and you had to purchase it sight-unseen, with the possibility of needing a 10L80 rebuild, torque converter, or rear end - would you do it?  I'm convinced most of the 10L80 trucks I test drove are broken, they can't all shift so bad, with massive flares/slipping/lurching and mis-matched downshifts like a teen driver learning stick.
    • From the spy shots, the front end does look like it's borrowing some styling cues from the Canyon. I'm more interested in the powertrain news than the screens though. If the 3.0 diesel survives into the next generation, that alone will keep a lot of current owners interested.  
    • What is this tuner you mentioned that can shut the system off?
    • I had it tested at the hardware store, and it showed no chip. He went out to started the truck today and it wouldnt fire. He waited an hour then tried again, and it started 3 times. In a row. My 2000 cavalier did not have a chip key, but still had a security system.  🤷‍♀️
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...