Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
i have replaced two brake module/vacuum pump/booster assemblies on the 2019s already. its an all in one unit. the only part that is separate is the  fluid reservoir. they have software issues. its all electronic.  
Ok sounds like I need the gm "update" soni can we what it is and add it to my file tunes. Send a email in the morning. Thanks

Sent from my SM-N960U using Tapatalk

Posted

Checked my VIN but it doesn't show a recall. Maybe I have the newer version pump or my VIN hasn't been added yet so I'll keep checking/waiting for a letter. Like was stated above, yet another good reason to stay on top of maintenance dealing with a clean oil supply.

  • Like 1
Posted


Most likely, same tech schools, Discount Tire is a fantastic company that I’ve brought my daily driver and exotic toys to throughout many years with zero issues.

There’s 3 in Conroe, probably because of their reputation of tires falling off. You can watch them through the glass. They double check with a torque wrench. I admit I use to check their work. Never found a loose lug.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
17 hours ago, dukedkt442 said:

Who the heck is that and why would I trust a high school drop out to touch my truck? Dealer provides 2 free rotations, so if convenient I’ll do them. 

 

I can rotate them for free too and do on my other 4, but the recall is the final impetus to drag myself the 5 miles down there to the dealer. 

As a former discount tire employee (days of 5 were hired and only 3 could keep their job, today auditions are gone), started back in the firestone/ford recall days, and later becoming a MB Master tech, dealerships have the worst tire and rotation on the planet period. They use impacts on wheel locks... they don't torque locks either. 

 

At my dealership it was so bad, I was made the 1 and only wheel and tire guy, 1 guy to do them all, even SLR wheels. Our president would have his family vehicles delivered to me from his other dealerships, that how bad dealership techs are at tires, few and I mean few should ever be allowed to touch a wheel and tire, let alone do flat repairs. none of them could calibrate the balancer install low pros without ripping them, I worked on hundreds of celebrities cars, loads of local sports stars from the cowboys, mavs, stars, FC club, musicians, actors, porn starts, local news reporters, and the ridiculously rich where I was paid to go to their house to remove them bring them back install and drive back out there to re install the assy...   etc....  

 

Another example my mom took her esky to caddie dealership, for the typical chrome peeling causing a slow leak, yeah the tech took a grinder to the wheel where the tire bead seals it only made it worse. 

 

Working at discount tire was 10x harder than being a MB tech. Dealership techs... LOL and I was one, it was bonkers to watch them F up wheels & tires everyday. 

 

I wont let any of my GM dealers touch my wheels and tires, I bought a coats tire machine and hunter tire balancer to do it myself, saving up for an alignment rack next, bet you wish I was your neighbor. 

 

 

Edited by camcamaro1991
  • Like 5
Posted (edited)
15 hours ago, bkesting said:

So there is a newer style pump? If so, is it hard to change out?

The pump is around $135 + the new serpentine belt if you so choose to replace.

From what i hear it takes about 1-2 hours or so to change out. 

 

Here is a video:

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRNXYmD30e8

 

Edited by Sierra Dan
  • Like 2
  • Thanks 1
Posted
18 hours ago, bkesting said:

So there is a newer style pump? If so, is it hard to change out?

its an updated pump. what internally different im not sure. i dont take them apart. 

 

i dont find them difficult to do but.... im an actual tech , i know what tools i need, what to remove , etc. i typically can do them in about 30 mins , 45ish on 4 wheel drives. a lil less clearance due to front diff/axles.  

  • Like 1
Posted
2 hours ago, Sierra Dan said:

The pump is around $135 + the new serpentine belt if you so choose to replace.

From what i hear it takes about 1-2 hours or so to change out. 

 

Here is a video:

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRNXYmD30e8

 

you dont need to replace the serpentine belt, but it does have to be removed and the ac belt and the vacuum pump belt. under the special coverage we replace the vacuum pump belt to. 

Posted
On 9/11/2019 at 3:37 PM, Sierra Dan said:

This recall however does not take care of the known faulty Vacuum Pump. Faulty Pump recall came about a few months back where they replace the pump if

a loss of braking power is detected. 

This software update is a band aid quicker and cheaper fix than replacing the root problem.

Aside from a possible loss in braking power...……..when the pump goes, it causes metal shavings to enter the oil system thus possibly grenading the engine.

Which is another good reason for replacing the newer upgraded Vacuum Pump.

 

i have yet to see the pump come apart and sending metal shavings into the oil system. i have replaced about 50 of them. 

  • Like 2
Posted
5 hours ago, jay webb said:

its an updated pump. what internally different im not sure. i dont take them apart. 

 

i dont find them difficult to do but.... im an actual tech , i know what tools i need, what to remove , etc. i typically can do them in about 30 mins , 45ish on 4 wheel drives. a lil less clearance due to front diff/axles.  

Thanks

Posted
5 hours ago, 1SLOW1500 said:

My understanding is the issue is oil gets past the pump.and into the booster. Not metal shavings.

Sent from my SM-N960U using Tapatalk
 

the vacuum pump is located on the driver side of the engine block just above the oil pan at the front of the block, it is driven by a belt on the pulley system. then a vacuum line runs from the top of the pump to the booster. in all the pumps ive replaced and remove that line from the pump to do so i have never seen any oil escaping from there. 

  • Like 2
  • Confused 1
Posted
On 9/12/2019 at 7:29 AM, Capt Bob said:

Checked my VIN but it doesn't show a recall. Maybe I have the newer version pump or my VIN hasn't been added yet so I'll keep checking/waiting for a letter. Like was stated above, yet another good reason to stay on top of maintenance dealing with a clean oil supply.

my vin isnt listed either, and verified with the dealer.  keeping up on those oil changes as well!

Posted
the vacuum pump is located on the driver side of the engine block just above the oil pan at the front of the block, it is driven by a belt on the pulley system. then a vacuum line runs from the top of the pump to the booster. in all the pumps ive replaced and remove that line from the pump to do so i have never seen any oil escaping from there. 
I know all that however that is in the service bulletin. And a reason to cheack and replace booster. And why there was lawsuit filed on this. The claim was oil from a failed pump destroyed the booster and it was a safety concern.

Sent from my SM-N960U using Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Posted
On 9/11/2019 at 11:27 PM, jay webb said:

ok the special coverage is for a faulty vacuum pump which is a mechanical pump attached to the engine. this is not a  recall. the recall is a reprogram of the EBCM software. two separate things. now i think gm is thinking if they change how the abs/ebcm uses the vacuum will prevent the pumps from wearing out. as a tech who has change 50ish of these pumps under special coverage i believe its a lack of proper oil changes, its attaches the engine and supplied oil from the oil system. people dont change their oil properly. wait til its says change oil soon/ or 0% or going 1000s of miles pass 0% oil life. I KNOW what is the point of the oil life monitor system? well its to inform you to change your oil but its based on software that uses an algorithm based on engine use/conditions. i have a 2018 sierra. i change my oil every 5000 i dont wait for the truck to tell me.  

In hind sight, my pump has been showing signs of failure for the last 10-15K miles, unfortunately for me I was outside of the 72K miles when the TSB was released.  That being said, I do not agree that all failures are related to dirty oil or lack of maintenance it could accelerate the inevitable though.  I change my oil regularly -- 11 times at an average of 7K miles over 78K miles using Mobil 1 EP (Last 6 changes) &  Pennzoil Ultra Premium (First 5 changes).  The AFM was deactivated within the first 7K miles via Range Device. 

 

 I was debating on trading in my truck on something else, or fixing the problem.  Today I ordered the new pump, and scheduled an appointment for the ECM re-flash Monday morning.  I am going to install the pump Monday myself after my re flash, hopefully the install won't be too difficult!   

 

 

  • Like 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

    342,732
    Total Members
    8,960
    Most Online
    user087
    Newest Member
    user087
    Joined
  • Who's Online   3 Members, 0 Anonymous, 843 Guests (See full list)


  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • Here's a starter kit:    CC Jensen, a Danish oil testing Concern gives us the following guidelines:   ISO 14/12/10 Very Clean Oil ISO 16/14/11 Clean Oil ISO 17/15/12 Lightly Contaminated ISO 19/17/14 New Oil ISO 22/20/17 Very Contaminated and not suitable for any service.   In addition CC Jensen gives a table showing how engine life is increased by cleaning up the oil. For example cleaning the oil from 19/17/14 to 13/11/8 will extend motor life by a factor of 6X.   But even cleaning it two “Life Extension Classes” will double motor life. So perhaps giving those classes would be useful:   21/19/16 20/18/15 19/17/14 18/16/13 17/15/12 16/14/11 15/13/10 14/12/9 13/11/8   *************************************   https://testoil.com/program-management/setting-iso-cleanliness-targets/   Third paragraph from the bottom will give a starting point.    Your next question should be, okay 10um at what Beta ratio and the answer is in the graph Beta 75.   Then the next question is what is your chosen filters profile? (Purolator PL series below) The red dot is Beta 75. This was the information I obtained from MANN a few years ago. So the best filters, Purolator One, AMSOIL EA, FRAM Ultra, Royal Purple, Bosch Premium should get a doubling engine life over filters like Purolator L, any service filter from any quick lube, WIX, NAPA, STP, Mobil 1, Purolator BOSS.    And as noted by CC Jensen a 2-5 micron @ Beta 200 bypass system has the capability of a six fold improvement. AMSOIL has such a system as does Donaldson.       Now having said all that testing is the touchstone. Test the oil NEW and test it with your chosen filter. Then test over milage. Do the work, get the result. But understand this in NOT absolute BECAUSE this is one factor in isolation.   Example:    A valve spring supplier can state that with cam X and a valve train of Y grams the valves will not float to 7K rpm. is that true if the builder choose a system 20 grams over limit? Common sense must be used and limits understood. 
    • This doesn't look like a GM truck. Not needed on a HD truck
    • It varies a ton around me. Some places are still at $5.00 or higher and others are way down into the $4's.   Offroad diesel was $4.02 at the one station I passed today.
    • So after reading the reveal from Chevrolet, I kept asking myself...why did the trim levels change?   Here are the official ones:   Work Truck (WT): The quintessential fleet truck, built with durable, easy-to-clean interiors for commercial or utilitarian use. Custom: A stylish, road-oriented trim that adds a more refined appearance, standard dual exhaust, and modern exterior styling. Custom Trail Boss: An entry-level off-roader featuring a 2-inch factory suspension lift and 34-inch mud-terrain tires on a budget. Silverado: Serving as the new base consumer truck (replacing the previous LT trim), it comes standard with the Z71 off-road package when equipped with 4WD. Trail Boss: Steps up the off-road hardware with the 2-inch lift, 34-inch tires, monotube shocks, an exclusive off-road hood, and more premium interior options. ZR2: The flagship off-roader. It boasts 35-inch mud-terrain tires, Multimatic DSSV dampers, front and rear electronic lockers, forged carbon-fiber interior accents, and an available hardcore Bison Edition (co-developed with AEV). High Country: The pinnacle of luxury. It replaces bright chrome with modern satin chrome, 22-inch wheels, premium leather, real wood interior trim, a panoramic sunroof, and an exclusive front-passenger touchscreen. As others have stated, why would you want a Silverado - 'Silverado' - wth?? LT needs to remain!!!   Also, there will no longer be a dedicated Z71 model.  All 4x4 trucks will have the Z71 package. Carplay is also something that cannot be removed.  Hopefully it will remain.     I am excited about the 5.7L V8 (350 C.I.D.)  Old school Chevy power.  My only concern is whatever version of AFM/DFM cylinder deactivation.  Too bad that isn't an option a buyer can choose to have or not.   I will definitely be stopping by my local dealership when these trucks start showing up.
    • I haven't seen diesel for less than $5.30 anywhere in my area
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...