Jump to content

2007 Vs 2008 Ltz Nbs


Recommended Posts

Posted

I posted this new thread with the intention of advising the 2007 owners ,there may be a solution for the following problems...

 

I had a 2007 and now I got the 2008.

 

the remote start on my 2007 would have some issues(wouldn't start)... with the 2008 almost a 100 remote starts and no issues...every one worked perfectly!

 

the 2007 had the transmission bump or delayed downshifting ,the 2008 never had it!

Posted
I posted this new thread with the intention of advising the 2007 owners ,there may be a solution for the following problems...

 

I had a 2007 and now I got the 2008.

 

the remote start on my 2007 would have some issues(wouldn't start)... with the 2008 almost a 100 remote starts and no issues...every one worked perfectly!

 

the 2007 had the transmission bump or delayed downshifting ,the 2008 never had it!

 

Lemon????

Posted

My 07 2500s 6 speed took some getting used to so it can shift all it wants

and it no longer bothers me...................

It has worked well either heavy towing or snow plowing with no issues.

The 16 mpg city I get with the 6.0/6 speed combo sure is better than

the 12 mpg city figures I got with my 01 or 04 6.0 2500s is a bonus!

 

My factory remote also has worked fine although the paultry 20 minute

X2 running time is a PIA as 40 minutes usually won't unthaw the truck

on frigid snowy mornings.......................

Posted
My factory remote also has worked fine although the paultry 20 minute

X2 running time is a PIA as 40 minutes usually won't unthaw the truck

on frigid snowy mornings.......................

 

+1 on this issue for me too,And you can't even adjust it for a longer time period. :ughdance:

Posted
My factory remote also has worked fine although the paultry 20 minute

X2 running time is a PIA as 40 minutes usually won't unthaw the truck

on frigid snowy mornings.......................

 

+1 on this issue for me too,And you can't even adjust it for a longer time period. :ughdance:

 

 

 

I just wear my winter coat into the truck and shiver for about 10 minutes. It's all good. No remote start for me.

Posted
My 07 2500s 6 speed took some getting used to so it can shift all it wants

and it no longer bothers me...................

It has worked well either heavy towing or snow plowing with no issues.

The 16 mpg city I get with the 6.0/6 speed combo sure is better than

the 12 mpg city figures I got with my 01 or 04 6.0 2500s is a bonus!

 

My factory remote also has worked fine although the paultry 20 minute

X2 running time is a PIA as 40 minutes usually won't unthaw the truck

on frigid snowy mornings.......................

It really takes longer than 20 minutes to thaw out your truck.
Posted
My 07 2500s 6 speed took some getting used to so it can shift all it wants

and it no longer bothers me...................

It has worked well either heavy towing or snow plowing with no issues.

The 16 mpg city I get with the 6.0/6 speed combo sure is better than

the 12 mpg city figures I got with my 01 or 04 6.0 2500s is a bonus!

 

My factory remote also has worked fine although the paultry 20 minute

X2 running time is a PIA as 40 minutes usually won't unthaw the truck

on frigid snowy mornings.......................

It really takes longer than 20 minutes to thaw out your truck.

 

 

 

 

I was wondering that myself...

 

neto: I haven't had those issues you mentioned

Posted
My 07 2500s 6 speed took some getting used to so it can shift all it wants

and it no longer bothers me...................

It has worked well either heavy towing or snow plowing with no issues.

The 16 mpg city I get with the 6.0/6 speed combo sure is better than

the 12 mpg city figures I got with my 01 or 04 6.0 2500s is a bonus!

 

My factory remote also has worked fine although the paultry 20 minute

X2 running time is a PIA as 40 minutes usually won't unthaw the truck

on frigid snowy mornings.......................

It really takes longer than 20 minutes to thaw out your truck.

 

 

 

Maybe he should get a spray-in cab liner?

 

 

:ughdance:

Posted
My 07 2500s 6 speed took some getting used to so it can shift all it wants

and it no longer bothers me...................

It has worked well either heavy towing or snow plowing with no issues.

The 16 mpg city I get with the 6.0/6 speed combo sure is better than

the 12 mpg city figures I got with my 01 or 04 6.0 2500s is a bonus!

 

My factory remote also has worked fine although the paultry 20 minute

X2 running time is a PIA as 40 minutes usually won't unthaw the truck

on frigid snowy mornings.......................

It really takes longer than 20 minutes to thaw out your truck.

 

 

 

Maybe he should get a spray-in cab liner?

 

 

:ughdance:

 

 

 

Ehhh...what the hell do we know about cold weather anyway ? :lol:

Posted
My 07 2500s 6 speed took some getting used to so it can shift all it wants

and it no longer bothers me...................

It has worked well either heavy towing or snow plowing with no issues.

The 16 mpg city I get with the 6.0/6 speed combo sure is better than

the 12 mpg city figures I got with my 01 or 04 6.0 2500s is a bonus!

 

My factory remote also has worked fine although the paultry 20 minute

X2 running time is a PIA as 40 minutes usually won't unthaw the truck

on frigid snowy mornings.......................

It really takes longer than 20 minutes to thaw out your truck.

 

 

 

Maybe he should get a spray-in cab liner?

 

 

:ughdance:

 

 

 

Ehhh...what the hell do we know about cold weather anyway ? :lol:

 

In Alaska, you guys don't know shiot about the cold. :)
Posted

Remote start works great for cooling the interior down before you get in here in California.

How do you guys thaw out your trucks? Can you do it like a piece of meat thats been in the freezer?...just take it out and wait a day? :uhoh::rollin:

Posted
Remote start works great for cooling the interior down before you get in here in California.

How do you guys thaw out your trucks? Can you do it like a piece of meat thats been in the freezer?...just take it out and wait a day? :uhoh::rollin:

 

Yeah, well at least we don't "tenderize" it by smashing the crap out of it all the time.

 

:lol::lol::lol:

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • I had skimmed through that article when you posted the link and honestly I felt rather defeated in a sense and realized that all these years in changing oil that in fact putting in what I was told was a good quality oil was probably not filtered as well as it should be although the filter put on the engine would be what ( as long as it never went into bypass mode ) would be the final filtering of the new oil that the engine components would first see, but then the filtering media itself is not up to par to what is ideal because a full flow filter would be too restrictive to filter fine enough for the engines best outcome in the long run. Only one of our tractors over the years which was a Versatile with a 855 Cummins had a separate bypass filter, some engine manufacturers did spec a partial bypass system within the main oil filter but I don't believe any other trucks or equipment I was servicing used such a filter. No doubt a product like the Amsoil bypass system is of benefit as long as nothing goes sideways with the extra plumbing and filter such as a rupture/leak that could cause the oil to pump out of the engine ( yes that Versatile had a remote canister with hoses routed to it as well ). With the idiot egr system on a diesel and as a result forcing a lot more soot into the oil, that certainly isn't helping the diesel engines cause or as you pointed out the GDI engine issue with creating more soot and aside from having a fancy secondary filtering system, changing the oil more often helping lower the total soot load.     So oil manufacturing and the end product is not something one can control and I wonder if there are specs on what various oil packaging companies produce in particle count or size. As to the filtering, if the OEM is not designing a filter size and spec that is really what it could be, they too are short changing the end user and so what is the answer. Of course as you say the oil side can only do so much if the air side isn't keeping up its end of the picture and air filters are only so efficient and if in a dusty environment such as farm or construction or driving gravel roads there is a lot of dirt to filter out and some of that ends up into the air stream.    Of course the irony in places like where I am where they dump the salt on the highways but also will mix in some calcium or outright pure calcium for problem road area's, or using calcium as dust control on gravel roads, the vehicle that gets used in that environment may rust out before a properly engineered engine and maintenance finally wears out so one has to face that reality in the rust belt. 
    • Has anyone run these on their 2500?
    • have you stuck with dealer oil changes since then? I made the same switch after getting tired of crawling around under the truck, but I’ve found some dealers are way better than others about getting you in quickly. Curious if yours has been good about scheduling or if you’ve had to look elsewhere for quicker turnaround.
    • Thank you.   I am set on a 3.0 Duramax as my previous truck with a Ford Ecoboost had just as many, if not more, "common" issues.  Cam phasers, timing chain issues, 10-speed valve body and CDF drum, emissions issues, etc.  So I figured, why not get 2x the fuel mileage (these things got 27+mpg on every mixed city/highway test drive I put them through) and better towing capability with resale value to boot?   My minimum, shortest trip will be 50 miles 1-way and I regularly go out of state with a travel trailer.  I'm planning on using this for a marketing/event promotion business also, which would require regular towing of trailers for bands, DJs, sound and lighting gear, along with my personal camera gear for filming events.   Looked at other trucks in the $30k+ price range but the issues seem to be everywhere, plus too many with gaudy mods.  I'm literally sticking with RWD trucks because they tend to be actually used as trucks, vs. the 4x4 models I've seen with unsafe lifts, huge tires, and general mods that would affect reliability (I'm wondering if some of them were tuned, hence the aggressive throttle response and hard shifting).   So my goal is to find a stock, 3.0 with 1 or 2 owners, in good physical condition, and decently well maintained.  Can't seem to find that up here, everything in the $27-30k range has had multiple owners, smoke smell, issues, or body damage.  Or the ridiculously modified trucks with 80k miles for under $27k but lots of problems...
    • That’s pretty tough Grumpy. I reread the previous few posts. They all reference oil changes. Much like your last thread. In my humble opinion it keeps things interesting.
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...