Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

 

Just purchased a set of 2019 Silverado take off wheels and tires for my 2014 truck   - Thought I could simply take off the old wheels & tires and bolt on the new ones.  Somewhere deep in the fine print of my purchase it says that the frequency for the tpms was changed in 2019.  Anybody know if that is true?  I don't want to take off the old wheels and tires, only to find out I'll have to un-mount both sets to put in my 2014 tpms on the 2019 wheels

 

Posted

From what I've seen and heard, the 19 sensors will not work on 18 and prior and the other way around. That goes for the 2500's also.

Posted

Thanks - looks like I'm going to the tire shop for some work 

Posted
31 minutes ago, Kleeve said:

Thanks - looks like I'm going to the tire shop for some work 

Yeah according to that thread his local Discount Tires couldn’t do it for him...might have to do the dealership thing or at least call whoever before a visit.

Posted

Local shop had me in and out in about an hour - added my existing sensors to the new wheels/tires - working great 

They knew about the frequency issue & had no problems getting things working

Anybody need some 433MHZ  sensors for a 2019 truck - no stems - Like new - less than 100 miles 

Tire rack is selling them for $50.00 each - make me an offer - Free shipping 

  • 9 months later...
Posted
On 12/19/2018 at 11:02 AM, Kleeve said:

Local shop had me in and out in about an hour - added my existing sensors to the new wheels/tires - working great 

They knew about the frequency issue & had no problems getting things working

Anybody need some 433MHZ  sensors for a 2019 truck - no stems - Like new - less than 100 miles 

Tire rack is selling them for $50.00 each - make me an offer - Free shipping 

Digging up this old thread cuz I'm dealing with a similar issue. I'm trying to put some 2018 wheels on my 2019 and I was quoted 400 bucks in labor to complete the sensor swap. Seemed a little high to me. Was yours in that same range?

Posted

You need to find another shop - My bill was $85.00  - This was at a regional tire shop  in Michigan called Mr Tire - I would try to find a shop that only deals with tires & related labor. 

 

  • 4 years later...
Posted

CPR Time, bringing this to life again.

 

Put some 2022 AT4 takeoffs on my 2015.  My DIC shows the pressure for each tire, I figured it would not.  Only problem is the numbers are all off.  Using a pressure gauge they all show 35-36, but the DIC shows 30-31 for them all.  I tried a hand gauge and also went to a gas station and used theirs off the air pump, both were reading 35-36 psi.  

 

What do I need to do? I will also add I swapped these in my garage and only have driven maybe 5 miles on them.  

Posted
1 hour ago, Skeeter McSkeet said:

CPR Time, bringing this to life again.

 

Put some 2022 AT4 takeoffs on my 2015.  My DIC shows the pressure for each tire, I figured it would not.  Only problem is the numbers are all off.  Using a pressure gauge they all show 35-36, but the DIC shows 30-31 for them all.  I tried a hand gauge and also went to a gas station and used theirs off the air pump, both were reading 35-36 psi.  

 

What do I need to do? I will also add I swapped these in my garage and only have driven maybe 5 miles on them.  

Just a guess, but are you old tires still nearby your truck when you are at home?  I suspect your truck may still be learned to the old sensors in the wheels no longer on the truck.  Add to that you haven’t driven far enough yet for the TPMS faults to set for not being able to read the sensor (because it’s still at home and no longer in range).

 

I’ve never heard of a 433 MHz sensor pairing and sending ANY data to a 315 MHz system like your K2xx truck is.

Posted (edited)
29 minutes ago, ksiesel said:

Just a guess, but are you old tires still nearby your truck when you are at home?  I suspect your truck may still be learned to the old sensors in the wheels no longer on the truck.  Add to that you haven’t driven far enough yet for the TPMS faults to set for not being able to read the sensor (because it’s still at home and no longer in range).

 

I’ve never heard of a 433 MHz sensor pairing and sending ANY data to a 315 MHz system like your K2xx truck is.

Yea my old tires are in my garage that my truck is in! I figured it wasn’t them as their pressure was around 34-35 when I pulled them off. You think that number would change once the weight of the truck was no longer on them unmourned? Seems kinda to make sense.  
 

I’m still guessing I’ll need new sensors put in them if that’s the case since the frequencies should be different in the 2022s.

Edited by Skeeter McSkeet
Posted
12 hours ago, Skeeter McSkeet said:

Yea my old tires are in my garage that my truck is in! I figured it wasn’t them as their pressure was around 34-35 when I pulled them off. You think that number would change once the weight of the truck was no longer on them unmourned? Seems kinda to make sense.  
 

I’m still guessing I’ll need new sensors put in them if that’s the case since the frequencies should be different in the 2022s.

 

The pressure will not change with or without the weight of the vehicle on the tire.  It will change pretty significantly with temperature though.

 

If you never did a sensor relearn procedure on the truck after replacing tires, you can be sure it is still looking for the sensors in the old wheels.  Each sensor has a unique transmitter number and this is what the TPMS module in the truck is looking for.  The relearn simply changes this association.  You can think of it just like a paired Bluetooth connection.

Posted
8 hours ago, ksiesel said:

 

The pressure will not change with or without the weight of the vehicle on the tire.  It will change pretty significantly with temperature though.

 

If you never did a sensor relearn procedure on the truck after replacing tires, you can be sure it is still looking for the sensors in the old wheels.  Each sensor has a unique transmitter number and this is what the TPMS module in the truck is looking for.  The relearn simply changes this association.  You can think of it just like a paired Bluetooth connection.

Ok took a 100 mile trip today and they weren’t recognized after about 25 miles. Will our trucks relearn the new version sensors in them? Saw some replacements you can screw in from the outside it looked like, made to swap winter/summer wheels. No idea on them. 

Posted
3 hours ago, Skeeter McSkeet said:

Ok took a 100 mile trip today and they weren’t recognized after about 25 miles. Will our trucks relearn the new version sensors in them? Saw some replacements you can screw in from the outside it looked like, made to swap winter/summer wheels. No idea on them. 

 

 

You need 315mHz sensors.  New wheels so 2019 T1 and up are 433mHz and won't talk to a 14-19 old truck.  

  • Thanks 1

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

    250.3k
    Total Topics
    2.7m
    Total Posts
  • Member Statistics

    342,717
    Total Members
    8,960
    Most Online
    Tiffanyrose
    Newest Member
    Tiffanyrose
    Joined
  • Who's Online   1 Member, 1 Anonymous, 1,043 Guests (See full list)

  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • I tried tapping it.  This might sound like a dumb question, you should feel vibration or some type of noise when it turns on? Can someone please verify? Thank you all!
    • I feel better now for my own view point and actions or lack there of towards the dealership service theme reading your post and others. GM corporate is who offers the two free oil changes on the HD trucks and I bought my truck in Feb of 2025 and those oil change offers run out within 2 years I believe and I highly doubt I will be using either one of them. I had asked if I could officially give those free services to another customer ( a friend ) and they said no, its all a GM corporate thing based on the vehicle in question. What that service advisor did however was go into a little story about how such and such customer was denied engine warranty because he had done his own oil changes because then they are not documented ... you see where that goes and so an employee playing the game of scaring the customer into having the service work done there most certainly triggered my thought process. At a later date I did talk to the person who handles warranty claims at the dealership and she said to be sure to document the oil changes and keep receipts for the oil and filter ( coped the receipts from cases of Mobil oil and case of filters I bought from them ) and the vehicles VIN, the date of service, mileage etc and staple that together as a record I would give them if that was ever needed and I keep my own log book for services for each vehicle as well. Oh and about 8 months after I bought the truck the dealer starts calling me to offer a maintenance service since they haven't seen my vehicle show up on their system ... for the mere fee of 300.00 Canadian to change the oil and rotate the tires and a few other minor checks and I declined the offer, I get the call again a couple of months later for the same thing and she could tell I was not interested and she asked if they should take my name off the call list and I said yes, do that !.    By the way did you happen to keep your factory oil filter to open it up and see the surprises inside as I expect some will show up as per the odd little sliver of metal shaving and particles that the filter does trap along with bits of grey silicone sealer that come off of the inside edge of mating surfaces. I have cut open every filter so far on my truck although few miles but have changed the oil often and the second filter was vastly better with very little of anything, that first filter was the unsettling one as I expected it would be. 
    • I get why they do this…but man…not ideal. I only extract on inboard boat engines because the drains are buried and even then I hate it because it’s easy to leave a quart behind with that method.   They should market it as an “oil refresh” not oil change!
    • I only get oil changed where I can watch. Valvoline pulls through the dipstick into a see thru glass. When done they show me the dipstick. About the only way they can mess up is using the wrong oil. But that secret wouldn’t stay secret long. Honda uses TQ wrenches on everything. You can watch through a plate glass window. Discount tires does that with tires. Trust but verify. 
    • I would not argue that with you. It would be pointless to argue against the truth and you speak the truth.    My question and in fact the entire point of this thread is an exploration into the levers of wear which happens no matter how well we maintain our powertrains.    Some of these levers we exert a good deal of influence over which can and do result is lower wear, longer powertrain life. Some others we are sort of stuck with.    An engine is typically done when the ring to bore seal no longer is able to do the job effectively. Normally the first thing to go in a engine otherwise well maintained and adult driven is this seal.    Looking into the means, methods, products and attitudes that influence the rate of wear seems a worthwhile inquiry to me.     
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...