When my 1999 Tahoe (4X4) had the same problem it was the front sway bar bushing was deteriorated. Slipped a new one one a it stopped.
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We both have G65, not G69, and I sure as shit have Nivomats on my Tahoe. If you remember, were the rears you pulled off much, much thicker than the fronts? If so, those are likely Nivomats and will need new springs if going with a traditional shock.
We both have G65, not G69, and I sure as shit have Nivomats on my Tahoe. If you remember, were the rears you pulled off much, much thicker than the fronts? If so, those are likely Nivomats and will need new springs if going with a traditional shock.
View attachment 251920 Here is a pic. Do the black ones look like nivomats?
Yes, they are bigger.
Thanks for confirming these are Nivomats. I'm assuming my next step is to buy this MOOG spring set, and four of these MOOG coil spring insulators. Installing these should make my rear suspension more stable, yes?
If anyone disagrees with installing the MOOG springs, please let me know.
Well, they look right, certainly larger than those other two. I think the Nivomats are larger in diameter than standard rear shocks. Do you know their diameter?
Could this be the culprit? Might want to start with that.(I have not replaced the idler arm)
Could this be the culprit? Might want to start with that.
My old 96 truck has always shuddered when I hit a bump, but mine seems to travel from the back to the front. I always blamed it on the cranked up torsion bars but I don't know that's really why it does it. Worse when I have rear tire pressure high.
Replaced all my steering components last year including the steering box. I did not want to revisit it any time soon and the parts were not too expensive. Literally did everything apart from the LCA bushings and lower ball joint as that's not really something I can do in my apartment parking spot.
Do a 2 man inspection of front and rear suspension.Also check body mounts. Long pry bar, one wheel at a time jacked a little. then front end jacked hanging at stops, rear jacked hanging at stops. Pay close attention to control arm bushings front and rear. Look for any movement outside of normal plane of movement. Such as when a tie rod wears, it will lift or shift instead of travel in normal direction. Pittmann arm/Idler arm Known trouble spots on these trucks, some people never see the wear/movement. When a problem child is in the shop, get a second set of eyes on it, along with a thorough test at various positions (turning left/turning right/ full turn on stops.)Touch and wiggle everything.A 1/8 inch movement in steering suspension is alot. Post if you have questions on your findings.
Stay away from AC Delco Advantage and Professional lines. They are crap. AC Delco OEM is good.OEM upper and lower control arms are showing $902 on GM Parts Direct. I went to Amazon and looked at the AC Delco Advantage, AC Delco Professional, and MOOG replacement control arms, but the reviews have me scared that they aren't built very well.
As much as I hate to let go of $1,000, if it means it'll be done right with quality parts that will last for years, I'm willing to pony up the cash.