Jump to content

Recommended Posts

  • 2 months later...
Posted

Update: Could not take the squeaking any longer, took the truck back with about 6500 miles. Complained about the brakes making noise and they said that they would take another look, one week later called and said all was fixed. Went and pick up my truck and right out of the gate it squeaked again, when I got home I looked at the ticket and they did the same thing as last time. When I got up the next morning after thinking about all night I was steaming. Drove right to the dealer and spoke with the service adviser, he said we could never make it make that noise, I said hop in in we are going for a ride, he got the service manager and the manager and I went for a drive, right off the bat it started squeaking with light pressure on the brakes. The service manager said sounds like it is coming from the rear, my thought was it was coming from the driver rear, when we got back to the dealership, he told the tech, to put new pads on the rear they have to replace both pads and they resurface the rotors what that that means. Morrow to the story NO MORE SQUEAKING BRAKES!!

Posted

Mine squeaks almost every time i start driving after its parked overnight. Only takes a few seconds of brake pressure for it to stop

  • Like 1
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

You may be able to isolate which axle is the problem by applying the e-brake to see if the sound starts or stops. If the brake changes the sound, it mean that axle is probably to blame. Anyway, if it were mine, I would probably change the brake pads to a type that are specifically designed to be quiet.

Posted

My 2017 2500 does this too. Pretty much right out of the gate, now at 12,000 miles still squeaky. No rhyme or reason when it squeaks some times it does some times it doesn't. I have a video of it squeaking now so I can show the dealer when I bring it in for next oil. I mentioned it the first time and they came back with, "the tech said the pads are like brand new". Well no shit!!

Posted

My 2017 started doing this after the first couple weeks. Only with light brake pressure first thing in the morning or after it hasn't been driven for quite a while. Then seems to go away. Only about 2000 miles on it now. Sounds like the rear brakes to me, maybe drivers side?

  • 7 months later...
Posted

So I'm having the same issues with (3) 2018 2500hd's and (1) 2015 in my fleet.  Yesterday 1 went metal to metal in 11,364 miles the other in 13,472 and both on the Left front inner pad.  After inspecting & Lu ricating the caliper slides & replacing the rotors and pads I noticed the left side(drivers side) seems to hang up slighlty more than the other side. I test drove it and broke in the pads to the rotors gently then turned it over to be driven by its user.  Later that day he informed me of an intermittent squeek from the drivers side.  I used my laser infrared temperature gun and I immediately noticed a 100 degree difference from left to right.   467 left. 359 right.  I dont know why yet but I am thinking GM is aware that something wrong as I dont think im alone on this.  If I figure it out soon I will be sure to share.  If anyone is experiencing the same please share any findings.

Posted

We have been seeing that more and more lately on the 2500 and 3500's that are towing heavy trailers and or used in commercial applications. I have personally been involved with three of them so far and it is usually just one side as Rdelfleet has said.GM has us changing the caliper and brake hose on the side with abnormal wear or brake temps.Of course a pad replacement and a rotor refinish and a thorough cleaning and lubrication of the caliper slides. Haven't seen one come back after doing this.

  • 9 months later...
Posted

Mine is at 30,000 miles and it’s been squeaking since day one. I was hoping it would fix itself but then realized there’s just something I have to live with with an $80k truck. 

Posted
5 hours ago, EXSlider400 said:

Mine is at 30,000 miles and it’s been squeaking since day one. I was hoping it would fix itself but then realized there’s just something I have to live with with an $80k truck. 

The 11 and newer HD's generally have excellent brakes (in contrast with the prior gen chassis).

 

I've had no noise from this on the previous LML.

 

As posted above, I have seen other threads about unusually short brake life and pulling to one side. 

eventually determined that there were some calipers machined wrong resulting in not floating on pins correctly -- resulting in excessive wear on one pad. 

 

If you got a noisy one it might be a good idea to get it looked at. 

 

I'd expect it's not one of those 'gotta live with it' things.

  • 1 month later...
Posted

I'd be interested to know if turning the rotors and replacing the pads has any lasting affect. Did all that on mine I got maybe 1000 miles on it before it came back with a vengance. Light pressure on a high moisture day can be embaressing. I'm with EXSlider, not something I want with a truck in this price range. The dealerships aren't much help. I registered this complaint with every layer of GM I could get to listen and never once got anything beyond your bussiness is important to us. It's deffinantly moisture related and I've quieted the sqeak by dressing the edge of the pads and contact points of the caliper with a dremel tool, applying lube to all contact points and applying a coat of antiseize to the back of each pad. No noise until the antiseize washes off and then a light chirp. I've been reapplying the antisieze every other service interval. I'm still open to suggestions if anyone finds a permanent fix.

Posted
15 hours ago, 02HD16 said:

I'd be interested to know if turning the rotors and replacing the pads has any lasting affect. Did all that on mine I got maybe 1000 miles on it before it came back with a vengance. Light pressure on a high moisture day can be embaressing. I'm with EXSlider, not something I want with a truck in this price range. The dealerships aren't much help. I registered this complaint with every layer of GM I could get to listen and never once got anything beyond your bussiness is important to us. It's deffinantly moisture related and I've quieted the sqeak by dressing the edge of the pads and contact points of the caliper with a dremel tool, applying lube to all contact points and applying a coat of antiseize to the back of each pad. No noise until the antiseize washes off and then a light chirp. I've been reapplying the antisieze every other service interval. I'm still open to suggestions if anyone finds a permanent fix.

Try a new caliper on that brake, it may not be seating quite flush, straight, on the rotor, due to machining problems on the offending caliper.

 

 

I think I'll quit grumbling about my squeaky leaf spring, can't hear it driving, just getting in and out.

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

    • Length/amount of data capture will be important to consider, sifting through 5 minutes of a data log can be enormous when it is stored in milliseconds. Being able to find the 'event' let alone decipher it.   Presumably the driver would notice something and hit a button to capture the 'window' of data. That window has to be large enough for the operator to recognize the event and react accordingly.    The data has to be able to be retrieved easily.   The data has to be able to be understood. Which is the biggest challenge, dealer techs won't even know what most of it is and would likely not even look at it if an owner brought it to them. Meaning the owner, the least educated/qualified, trying to understand it.    How will the data be presented? Could specific PIDs be selected and a timelapse graph be watched? How will a specific value be noted as abnormal? Additionally, a good data logger would be able to 'learn' normal values for a specific vehicle and flag abnormalities automatically. It could in theory watch parameters degrade over time and suggest maintenance as needed. (If the MAF reading begins tapering off for a given set of other readings - MAP, throttle position, Ambient, etc.. a flag to check air filter.) With the amount of data available, a device (really the vehicle rather than an additional accessory) should be able to do more than issue a DTC. It should be able to run the full diagnostic suite automatically and present a solution rather than a code. (It's not the 90's anymore). The technology is available for the vehicle to not just say "P0087", it should know low fuel pressure, check other PIDs to narrow down the problem itself, and determine if it is a lift pump, high pressure pump, regulator, leak in the fuel line, clogged filter, etc. Even if it can't narrow it down, it should be able to guide the user to the likely problems.   This would be a major problem for dealer service departments, which are the manufacturers customers it is in their collective best interest to NOT have this available to the consumer.   Further, if the owner is going to be the primary consumer of the data, it's got to be at a consumer price point vs. dealer only specialty tool price.   This group is more 'involved' in their vehicle than general public/consumer and will have knowledge, experience, needs and desires that are quite different from the market at large.   
    • I put the prof up. If you read what I posted. You can see that housing, cars and income are in line with the era we were talking about. It’s harder in some places easier in others. Let’s agree to disagree and put this back on track, OK? We both are pretty stubborn and hard headed. But I bring receipts. If you wish I will not respond to you in the future. 
    • Lets see if I can sum up two pages of nothing useful.    You want to refute your own governments data of the "Purchasing Power" Index FOR THE ENTIRE USA and its territories replacing it with the experience of a single family and its business and label that reality?  Then pound on that for a week hoping it will find traction?    Stan, I've told you several times. I don't do irrational. There are more people in the USA than your family.    I'm pretty sure this tread is so blown up. I'll give you a few days or months if need be to post yourself silent then I'll see if I can find enough parts of the train to reassemble it. 
    • Facebook groups hate VSE, poor customer service; their responses to criticisms are pretty poor for a reputable company. I'm not a customer, haven't bought anything from them, but how they handle themselves on social media is a definite "No" for me. 
    • $10,000 for a transmission?   Pretty sure I could buy all the parts, tools, and education to rebuild it myself for a quarter of that amount.   or swap it out with a new one...
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...