backwaterchile
TYF Newbie
- Joined
- Nov 5, 2024
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Thanks for this. Based on the numbers, there were ~28,000 reports through February out of about 590,000 affected vehicles for a rate of 4.7%
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If the ‘25s are truly free of this failure issue, then I’ve got to believe that GM knows a) that there was a defective parts problem, and b) knows when those parts were no longer installed in engines. With the issuance of this recall now, GM would have to be [even more] insane to put a new engine in your truck that they know has/could have faulty parts in it. So, I’d feel pretty confident that you’re going to get a reliable engine.Questions: Other than confirming the date of manufacture of the new engine and the proper oil to use in the new engine, please advise me on what other questions/areas of inquiry I should discuss with service manager. Your help is appreciated!
If your truck is on the list, then it could very well get a new engine. The ones that had engine failures prior to the recall (and were still under warranty, at least) are already getting new engines. So the recall is for trucks that HAVEN’T failed yet but that GM believes are prone to failure.but GM wants to only take care of the ones failed, and apply a band aid to the survivors...
There are 3 types of trucks from what I am seeingSo the recall is for trucks that HAVEN’T failed yet but that GM believes are prone to failure.
For those of us who live in cold climates what's your advice? I'm in a small northern MN community, on the Canadian border, with temps averaging below freezing for nearly six months of the year.Ouch, you need to change the oil by at least the 50% OLM.
Hopefully you are not in a colder climate.
In this case I would probably consider implementing the REVERSE WARM UP. Start the car and drive the short distance to the event, then in some cases leave it idle as it is at least partially warmed up. This is where an Oil Temp gauge like the 2025 units would come in BIG TIME HANDY. It is not about the engine temperature, it is all about the oil temperature.
I think I may need to look back in my Logs to see if I can somehow map Transmission Temperature to expected Oil Temperature. At least this would give the driver some idea if the engine oil still needs to simmer some more.
I do see your concern. I just haven’t seen info about a P0016 code being a prerequisite for engine replacement yet. Where is this stated? (And have all of the blown engines thrown this code? If so, how soon prior to the failure?)There are 3 types of trucks from what I am seeing
- Already failed (engine replacement)
- About to fail and set the P0016 code (engine replacement)
- The ones that haven't set the code yet (survivors). The survivor ones are still a spectrum with ones ranging from "walking wounded" to healthy.
Survivors will get the band-aid with a 0W-40 ... but the "walking wounded" survivors could still fail soon even with 0W-40....
See my concern ?
That's a tough one. Hopefully you can garage the truck most of the time. They make silicon oil pan heaters that you can stick on the bottom of the oil pan and plug in to warm the oil. Then the question is where you can park when you are out are 120 Volt power outlets available for plugging in? I know some Northern areas this is common.For those of us who live in cold climates what's your advice? I'm in a small northern MN community, on the Canadian border, with temps averaging below freezing for nearly six months of the year.
I do see your concern. I just haven’t seen info about a P0016 code being a prerequisite for engine replacement yet. Where is this stated? (And have all of the blown engines thrown this code? If so, how soon prior to the failure?)
Yes, all the 'survivors' should be entitled to extended warranty IMO. I think that is a fair compromise... but that would technically signal a "hey we are not sure about this fix" and may not meet NHTSA recall requirements if done as part of the recall. However, if that extended warranty was in response to a lawsuit or done as a "customer satisfaction" program, that would decouple it from NHTSA investigation.How about at least extending the engine Warranty for folks.
guess I am lucky as my engine build date was July 15, 2024