alvocado
Allen
I changed trans fluid every 50K and my torque converter went at 211k miles.
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The 6L80s last longer in the GMT900s because of the different cooling system. They generally fail at about 160K miles if they've never been serviced and the first failure point are the solenoids in the TECHM. The torque converter clutch lining issue seems related to heat and the higher horsepower 6.2s in the GMT-900s.The transmission in my 2016 Suburban made it to around 100,000 miles before it gave up and cost me $5000.
I'm looking at a 2012 Tahoe and was wondering if the older 6L80's were free of this horrible torque converter and high temperature issues that the K2 trucks have?
I don't know much about the 2007-2014 generation trucks. Thanks guys!
Thank you for that reply, it's informative and encouraging.The 6L80s last longer in the GMT900s because of the different cooling system. They generally fail at about 160K miles if they've never been serviced and the first failure point are the solenoids in the TECHM. The torque converter clutch lining issue seems related to heat and the higher horsepower 6.2s in the GMT-900s.
Run them on the severe service schedule, changing the fluid every 40K miles or so and they ought to last a long time. It is not uncommon for them to exceed 200K miles or even 300K miles. A few years ago, a work truck with a 6L90 drove into the shop (Precision Transmission) for overhaul with over 312K miles on it.
One of mine has over 220K on it and still runs just fine.
Change it.Thank you for that reply, it's informative and encouraging.
I just bought a 2012 with 111,000 and based on the Carfax, no transmission service history. It may have been done, it may not.
Based on your experience, would you recommend a pan drop and filter change, a flush, or leave it alone and hope to get to 160,000?





Perfect, thanks. I'll wait until the weather warms up here in CNY and do a pan drop and filter change, probably in May. I'll only put 4000 miles on it between now and then and I'm pretty gingerly. I always try to drive in a style that makes the transmission hunt less and go in and out of OD less.
I've been blown away watching the trans temps in this rig compared to my old 2016 Suburban. This one hasn't really gotten above 160 no matter what. The Suburban would push 195 pretty much all the time. It's gotta be a factor in the 6L80 failures and as you confirm, it appears to be.
I almost always put the transmission in manual mode and leave it in Gear 5 around town, or in any state road that is under 65mph, to help minimize the hunting & pecking for 6th gear.
I also bought one of those fluid extractors with 10ft of hose attachments to exchange ATF much easier between filter changes.
Swapping the TQ at 180k was a good idea, and I'm getting closer to 200k on my 6L80. I've had a BBP tune in it since about 155k when I got the rig.
Just get the BBP ECM/TCM tune. It's the best bang-for-your-buck preventative maintenance protocol you can do for your drivetrain, disguised as a performance upgrade.If it weren't for the aggressive downshifting when slowing, I'd keep it in tow/haul at all times. I just like the way the truck feels and performs and I think it does, too.
I should probably get a good tune.
3.08 gears?I almost always put the transmission in manual mode and leave it in Gear 5 around town, or in any state road that is under 65mph, to help minimize the hunting & pecking for 6th gear.
3.42 - there's lots of hills and valleys around here. Almost nothing is flat/level unless you're driving along a river, and even then it's never really level for long.3.08 gears?
*Edit sorry thought that was for me3.08 gears?
I'll look into that tune. I'm trying not to dislodge the tranny from the truck so confidence is low that I'll be upgrading the TC before the tranny goes.Just get the BBP ECM/TCM tune. It's the best bang-for-your-buck preventative maintenance protocol you can do for your drivetrain, disguised as a performance upgrade.
Edit: and change the TC for a billet-backed unit. The CVC unit from Summit is probably similar pricing to the factory JMBX unit. The LUK converter that seems to be fairly new for our rigs is neat, but I've seen a few threads around here with some tuning questions/issues. I think in a stock role it works perfectly fine, but I could be off-base on that.
I hear you on that. I was swapping engines, so figured is was a "now or never" decision.I'll look into that tune. I'm trying not to dislodge the tranny from the truck so confidence is low that I'll be upgrading the TC before the tranny goes.
No, you want this one.WOW 400 beans for a Black Bear tune. Ouch.
www.blackbearperformance.com
$2 a day for a year. You can search the forum, and see that no one really has anything but good things to say about the tune. It really improves the entire driving experience.Even better.
Worth every penny and then some. The tune is the foundation upon which all other mods build upon. It's also your best bang for the buck performance mods wise.WOW 400 beans for a Black Bear tune. Ouch.
CARB has been stripped of just about all authority now. They're laying off workers in droves. They'll keep up with or do safety inspections to keep the money machine going.In California you can't modify the engine tune, it will be caught at the 2 year smog inspection. With the 08 6.2L I am very happy with the factory engine tune, it runs like a beast.