Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
7 hours ago, nobaddays said:

Just installed Bilstein 5100's all the way around. Have the front set to +1.1". Ride is much better, and it leveled out the front nicely.

5100-1.jpg

Great looking truck!  Perfect stance.

Posted
Yes, Upgraded the rear shocks to Bilstein 5100s several months ago when I did the 2" block.

I just had 2” front spacer and rear blocks installed was thinking of changing the rear shocks to bilsteins but not sure of model # since it’s taller than stock. Some like the leveled look. I love the rake look.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Posted
3 hours ago, Thejet07 said:


I just had 2” front spacer and rear blocks installed was thinking of changing the rear shocks to bilsteins but not sure of model # since it’s taller than stock. Some like the leveled look. I love the rake look.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Agreed, we tow a camper a few times a month, so I need the rake for same towing. 

Posted

Found a mint condition dual exhaust bumper. I installed it and installed the powder coated tips I had already. Simple swap, it looks much better now. I took it to the exhaust shop today to reroute the exhaust. 

9F611525-6EB9-4B1E-A743-9983859C16DB.jpeg

FF3A2EC5-2ABE-4183-A195-55FE1A4104FF.jpeg

A070914F-4373-45B2-AD83-F1CAF59B369B.jpeg

  • Like 8
Posted

Crossed 11k miles in the 19 Trail Boss this morning.  Love this truck.   And this forum makes the ownership experience even better. Appreciate all of you out there. 

  • Like 1
Posted

Welp at 11,300 miles today had a bunch of things pop up (brake malfunction, traction control) and check engine came on. I did have it scanned for the original recall some time ago guess it didn’t work. I have an open recall hope it takes care of it. I did scan and clear the three codes, started truck and no check engine light [emoji848]

Truck drove fine after the check engine too

9de0af47941ec7d9d9c71225910d3a44.jpge2cca412597618411bb4f7c610a8ff11.jpg43631f9668444c55eb99d2a7ad4e32de.plist


Ryan B.

Posted
Crossed 11k miles in the 19 Trail Boss this morning.  Love this truck.   And this forum makes the ownership experience even better. Appreciate all of you out there. 
Happy for you bro, agreed that everyone on this forum has been very helpful.

Sent from my SM-N975U using Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Posted
On 8/12/2020 at 3:54 PM, pewterliftedz said:

Yes, Upgraded the rear shocks to Bilstein 5100s several months ago when I did the 2" block.

Your setup looks great, have been wanting to upgrade to the Eibach lifting struts and rear shocks, could you provide the part number for 2” TB rear blocks or where you purchased?  Do you know how much rake your truck had prior to installing the Eibach struts?  And how much after?  Thanks for the help.

Posted

Debadged my whole truck today and removed the “4x4” stickers. Looks so much cleaner! Wish I did this sooner.

 

I have a set of the matte black “CHEVROLET” 3D tailgate inserts on the way to match the black bow tie on the front.

 

 

https://imgur.com/gallery/2wI2L3q

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Posted

Looks clean thinking about doing my tailgate


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Posted
Had a damn roofing nail hole patched in my new Ridge Grapplers!  [emoji2959][emoji2959][emoji2959][emoji2959]


Oh 5h!t!!! Sorry to hear that man. Sucks! At least it was patchable.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro

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

    342,759
    Total Members
    8,960
    Most Online
    DM22
    Newest Member
    DM22
    Joined
  • Who's Online   5 Members, 1 Anonymous, 1,741 Guests (See full list)


  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • Did have to make 1 modification because of the WeatherTech rear mud flaps and that was needing 3 longer screws than what came with the install package. 😄
    • Picked up the liners yesterday. Installed passenger side WITHOUT any modifications. All mounting holes lined up perfectly. Rain is interfering today with drivers side. Very Happy! Will add pics when finished
    • As a matter of amusement I’ll leave this conversation with this. Do you beat the government average fuel estimate? Statistics are a guide to me. Not a rule. Someone once said I have to have the last word. If true and possible may be. I’ll blame that on working in a family business.
    • That is a fair point, and I agree that trying to log “everything in the truck” would be the wrong direction.   There are a lot of modules and a lot of traffic. If the product became a full-truck datalogger, the amount of data would get huge very quickly, and most owners would never use it.   I think the first useful version would need to be narrow: - powertrain-side event evidence - selected high-value parameters - communication / voltage / reset events - pre/post event window - short report first, raw log only as backup   One distinction I should make is between active OBD/PID polling and passive bus capture. If you are polling PIDs through OBD, then yes: the more parameters you request, the lower the effective sample rate becomes, and you are adding diagnostic traffic to a vehicle that is already busy running itself. With passive CAN capture, the recorder is not asking all the modules for data. It is listening to traffic that is already on the bus. So it does not consume vehicle bus bandwidth in the same way that a scan tool polling hundreds of PIDs would. But your point still applies in a different way.   Even if passive capture does not add bus traffic, the recorder still has limits: - processing rate - storage rate - timestamp accuracy - decoder workload - event filtering - report size - user attention span   So the answer cannot be “log everything and let the user figure it out.” The product would need to store enough raw evidence to be useful, but only decode, graph, and present the important parts around the event.   A practical report should probably show: - what triggered the capture - how much pre/post data was preserved - which selected parameters changed - how those values compared to baseline - whether the same pattern happened before - whether any voltage, reset, bus-off, lost-message, or communication fault occurred - selected graphs around the event - raw data only as supporting evidence   So I agree with you. More data is not automatically better. The real product is the reduction from raw data into a useful event report.
    • That makes sense, and I agree with most of that.   I think the product would need both: 1. a default powertrain template, so it is useful out of the box; 2. user-selected priority parameters, so the owner or shop can choose what they want to see first.   Different users are going to care about different things. One owner may care about oil pressure and voltage. Another may care about misfire trend, AFM/DFM behavior, or U-codes. A shop may want communication events and repeatability first. Your baseline point is probably the most important one. Raw data is not very useful unless the report can show what normal looked like for that vehicle under similar conditions.   The way I would think about it is: - start with a basic known-good baseline - learn normal behavior for that specific vehicle over time - allow the event to be overlaid against baseline - show whether the event was a one-time spike or a repeatable pattern - provide a simple severity level, but with clear limits on what that severity means   For example, early severity could be something like: - Info: event captured, no obvious abnormal pattern - Watch: value moved outside baseline, but not repeated - Warning: repeatable abnormal pattern under similar conditions - Critical: communication loss, voltage drop, bus-off, reset, or severe repeated event   I would not want the first version to say “replace this part.” That would be overclaiming unless there is repair-confirmed data behind it. It would be more honest to say “this pattern deserves inspection.”   On the OBD port question, I think OBD absolutely has a role. OBD is probably the right place for: - DTCs - freeze frame - VIN - calibration information - normal scan-tool parameters - Mode 6 / enhanced diagnostic data if available The reason I am still looking at an ECM-side recorder is that the failure may happen before anyone connects a scan tool. If the owner plugs in a scanner after the event, the pre-event evidence may already be gone unless the ECU happened to save it. So I do not see this as “OBD versus ECM-side.” I see it more like: - ECM-side recorder: always armed, rolling buffer, event evidence - OBD/DLC companion: DTCs, freeze frame, VIN, calibration, normal scan data - phone/cloud: status, notes, upload, report generation, notifications   I agree that phone connection and push notifications would be useful. I just would not want the phone or cloud connection to be required for capture. The recorder should save the event locally even if the phone is not connected. The phone should help with event marking, download, notes, upload, alerts, and report viewing.   For a default GM V8 event report, would this list make sense? - RPM - calculated load / MAP - throttle position - vehicle speed - gear / torque converter state if available - coolant temperature - oil pressure - oil temperature if available - battery voltage - commanded AFM/DFM state if available - actual AFM/DFM state if available - misfire counters / roughness by cylinder if available - fuel trims - relevant U-codes / communication events - bus-off / lost periodic message / module reset / voltage drop events Which of those would you remove, and what would you add?
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...