Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Hi All, new to the forum here and excited about purchasing my first truck!

I have put a deposit down on a 2021 RST with 5.3L Vortec with DFM (I verified this on the sticker that it has DFM). I also checked the build code on the door jam and it says Feb 2021. The car has about 11k miles and from the carfax report it has 3 service records inlcuding oil changes. Car was first bought in michigan and it made it to my local MA dealer via auction. It is CPO and I feel pretty good about that but now to the lifter spring question. There is a service note on that model and the manufacture date fits inside the service manufacture date to replace potentially faulty lifter springs.

Question is, do I raise this to the dealer before delivery and ask that it be done or just drive the car off and be ok with the fact that I have an extended CPO warranty for 100k miles and 6 years (I am unlikely to reach both as owner). I am not sure how I feel about techs fidling with thiese parts of the engine for an essentially brand new truck but also concerned to just be left stranded one day (something which could happen with any car) but this is a specific known issue. Any advise is appreciated.

  • Thanks 1
Posted

Honestly, as an owner of a '21 Silverado with the 5.3, I would not buy that truck. There is a reason it's already on the used lot and it's not just because of inflated trade-in values. Even if it came with full lifetime, no questions asked warranty coverage, knowing what I know now about the L84 5.3 V8 and the quality issues GM is currently having, I would never have bought it. Our lifters failed at 585 miles, among other issues. Between repairs and regular maintenance, I've had nine service appointments over 16 months of ownership, four rental cars, and it spent 51 days at the dealer. I sincerely hope this isn't typical for everyone who owns these trucks, but this is not an isolated instance for this particular model year. We plan on trading in ours within the next several months, as well.

Posted
1 hour ago, Oscar Cabrera said:

There is a service note on that model and the manufacture date fits inside the service manufacture date to replace potentially faulty lifter springs.

So, you are going to ask them to tear apart an engine that is showing/has no problems? Who would reimburse them for this?

 

Honestly, what do you think their response will be?

Posted

If you purchase any 5.3 or 6.2 with AFM or DFM you are gambling that you will not be one of the 10% ? that will have lifter failure. If you don't want to take the risk, buy a 2500 and you will get a Bullitt proof engine.

Posted

So the plot thickens....Due to an available carfax I called a service center where it shows it was serviced and asked them if they could share with me what work had been done on the truck....and YES, it was the lifter issue which I am referring to here. The guy at the service center (not a chevy dealer) was very open and honest as I explained I was in the process of buying the car. He said it was lifter and pushrod issue and they had gone in and replaced both banks of lifters, seals, etc. etc. with the updated ones (they could not use the old ones even if they had them in stock). So essentially the failure has already happened in this truck and has been serviced. He said the main issue is the OCI and it should be done at 5k miles at most.  He said the trucks are notorious for this also, but also said that if the car was under warranty it would be covered if anything happened again. Thoughts now???

Posted
2 hours ago, Oscar Cabrera said:

Hi All, new to the forum here and excited about purchasing my first truck!

I have put a deposit down on a 2021 RST with 5.3L Vortec with DFM (I verified this on the sticker that it has DFM). I also checked the build code on the door jam and it says Feb 2021. The car has about 11k miles and from the carfax report it has 3 service records inlcuding oil changes. Car was first bought in michigan and it made it to my local MA dealer via auction. It is CPO and I feel pretty good about that but now to the lifter spring question. There is a service note on that model and the manufacture date fits inside the service manufacture date to replace potentially faulty lifter springs.

Question is, do I raise this to the dealer before delivery and ask that it be done or just drive the car off and be ok with the fact that I have an extended CPO warranty for 100k miles and 6 years (I am unlikely to reach both as owner). I am not sure how I feel about techs fidling with thiese parts of the engine for an essentially brand new truck but also concerned to just be left stranded one day (something which could happen with any car) but this is a specific known issue. Any advise is appreciated.

 

 

See my reply in your original post about this truck.

Posted
33 minutes ago, Oscar Cabrera said:

So the plot thickens....Due to an available carfax I called a service center where it shows it was serviced and asked them if they could share with me what work had been done on the truck....and YES, it was the lifter issue which I am referring to here. The guy at the service center (not a chevy dealer) was very open and honest as I explained I was in the process of buying the car. He said it was lifter and pushrod issue and they had gone in and replaced both banks of lifters, seals, etc. etc. with the updated ones (they could not use the old ones even if they had them in stock). So essentially the failure has already happened in this truck and has been serviced. He said the main issue is the OCI and it should be done at 5k miles at most.  He said the trucks are notorious for this also, but also said that if the car was under warranty it would be covered if anything happened again. Thoughts now???

The oil change interval won't guarantee much on a relatively new vehicle, but that's good that all 16 were replaced.

 

My rule of thumb is never let the oil life monitor go below 50%, which usually works out to about 3500-4000 miles. In the manual, the "severe service" oil change interval is roughly 4000 miles, anyway, and most manufacturers include short trips and winter driving as "severe service" so basically everyone qualifies.

Posted

I am just wondering if I should just go ahead with it being that the failure has already happened and maybe I am at a lesser chance of the unknown, or just move on, knowing that someone has had they hands in there already and fiddled around with the internals.

Posted

If you have put this much thought into the impending failure, I would personally move on.

 

You will never enjoy the truck always wondering when it is going to fail, JMO. 

Posted

I am actually feeling kinda positive about it. Just wanted to get a view from a broader group and people who know these trucks much better than I do. I have driven Toyota's and more recent volkswagens and reliability has been excellent. I know I am walking away from that but the funcitonality of a truck is much better for my needs now.

Posted

vehicles have failures, if it's covered under warranty while you own it then who cares. You gotta live your life my friend.

Posted
On 4/11/2022 at 3:07 PM, Oscar Cabrera said:

I am actually feeling kinda positive about it. Just wanted to get a view from a broader group and people who know these trucks much better than I do. I have driven Toyota's and more recent volkswagens and reliability has been excellent. I know I am walking away from that but the funcitonality of a truck is much better for my needs now.

You want to downgrade from a Toyota to GM?  You’re in for a rude awakening.  

Posted
On 4/11/2022 at 12:31 PM, dgstarr63 said:

If you purchase any 5.3 or 6.2 with AFM or DFM you are gambling that you will not be one of the 10% ? that will have lifter failure. If you don't want to take the risk, buy a 2500 and you will get a Bullitt proof engine.

Where did you get the 10% ?

Statements like this run wild on the www.

So out if a million trucks, 100,000 of them will fail? Really? C'mon man .

The actual number is probably less than 1%.

I'd say out of that 1%, most of these didn't change the oil often enough. 

Unless you have the actual facts, quit spewing false information. 

Posted

All the indicators I hear and read report that used trucks and SUVS are bringing close to new prices. I wouldn’t buy anything new unless I had a overpriced trade in. Offsetting the new truck prices. I wouldn’t buy without extended warranty. I wouldn’t buy a CPO that already had lifter problems. I wouldn’t buy a cylinder deactivation vehicle. I wouldn’t only own one vehicle. Because of parts availability all vehicles sit at repair shops for extended times. My wife’s Genesis needs a starter. We’re at ten days. And they like us, being repeat customers.

Posted
3 hours ago, dieselfan1 said:

Where did you get the 10% ?

Statements like this run wild on the www.

So out if a million trucks, 100,000 of them will fail? Really? C'mon man .

The actual number is probably less than 1%.

I'd say out of that 1%, most of these didn't change the oil often enough. 

Unless you have the actual facts, quit spewing false information. 

 

Fact: you have a 100 percent chance to have lifters collapse and other mechanical failures if you dont change your oil for 7500-10k miles. 

 

Also fact: we hear about it a lot because this generation is a bunch of young kids that dont even know what oil weight or oil type their vehicles take or how much they take let alone cant even change oil themselves, and they freak the hell out when something funky goes on with their vehicles.  

  • Haha 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
  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • It wouldn’t have happened if the government hadn’t mandated outrageous fuel mileage standards. It does very little for the consumer. It adds cost. Back during Covid there was a chip shortage. They gave a rebate for your truck if it didn’t have the chip to turn on cylinder deactivation. It was 50$ because at best you may see 1/2 a mile increase per gallon. Splitting hairs each fuel mileage trick wasn’t mandated. The government doesn’t do the engineering work and say use this until it’s already in use and they like it. The fuel mileage was mandated. And those add ons the results. There’s a mandate and they are the results.
    • It was never mandated.  Ever.    Automakers were incentivized to install it by getting CAFE credits to help with their vehicle fleet fuel economy scores.  They were being handed money/CAFE credits to install it.  Which is NOT a mandate.       The current admin removed the incentives that were behind them installing it.       
    • Are you playing Slide Down endlessly but your score is still low? Are you constantly crashing into obstacles as the game speed increases? Don't worry, this article will share 5 invaluable tips to help you master the race and impress your friends. Golden Rules 1. Look one step further. The mistake of 90% of new players is only staring at their character. The secret of experts is to look towards the top of the screen (where the slide is about to appear). This gives your brain an extra 0.5 - 1 second to process the situation and determine the direction of movement before the obstacle approaches. 2. Use gentle movements; don't swipe too hard. Slide Down is very sensitive. Moving your finger too forcefully or with excessive amplitude will cause your character to be thrown off course or crash into a wall. Practise moving your finger with small, decisive, and precise movements. 3. Don't be greedy for gold in dangerous locations. Gold coins are tempting for buying skins, but life is more important. If you see a gold coin right on the edge of a cliff or next to a spike trap, ignore it. Our goal is a High Score, and your score only increases if you survive. 4. Make the most of Power-ups. During the slide, you'll encounter items like Magnets (attract gold) or Shields (temporary invincibility). Never miss them! Especially the Shield, it's your "get out of jail free card" to help you get through those deadly fast sections. 5. Stay calm when speed peaks. When your score exceeds 500 or 1000, the game speed will be very fast. At this point, don't try to think logically; let your natural reflexes work. Take deep breaths and don't panic. Apply these 5 tips to your next game, and your leaderboard will surely improve dramatically. Good luck climbing the Slide Down leaderboard!
    • If you use compressed air regularly, one problem you cannot ignore is moisture. Water in the air line can cause rust, unstable air pressure, poor tool performance, and even damage to sensitive equipment. That is why I highly recommend using a desiccant air dryer. A desiccant air dryer is designed to remove moisture from compressed air by using drying materials such as activated alumina or molecular sieve. Compared with basic water separators, it can achieve much lower dew points, making it especially useful for applications that require dry and stable air. For workshops, painting systems, pneumatic tools, CNC machines, laser cutting equipment, and industrial production lines, a desiccant air dryer can make a big difference. It helps protect equipment, improve air quality, reduce maintenance costs, and extend the service life of the whole compressed air system. Another advantage is reliability. Many desiccant air dryers are built for continuous operation and can maintain stable drying performance even in demanding environments. For users who care about long-term efficiency and equipment protection, this is a smart investment. When choosing a desiccant air dryer, I suggest paying attention to air flow capacity, working pressure, dew point performance, regeneration method, and maintenance requirements. A good model should match your compressor system and actual air consumption. Overall, if moisture is causing problems in your compressed air system, a desiccant air dryer is definitely worth considering. It is practical, efficient, and highly useful for anyone who needs clean, dry, and reliable compressed air.
    • My brand new 2007 Silverado's wax frame was rust from end to end partway through it's SECOND winter here in MA. That stuff is completely useless.    
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...