Preventative Maintenance Plan Guidance (WWYD?)

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tooleyondeck

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BLUF: seeking WWYD guidance on best areas to invest in preventative maintenance to minimize common issues for the next year.

2003 GMC Yukon XL Denali - LQ4/4L65
220K, original engine & trans

I am looking for opinions on where I should focus doing some preventative maintenance to try to mitigate as much risk possible over the next year. Obviously, with the current age and mileage anything can go wrong at any time. I would like to gauge the members here as there may be things I am not thinking about, and second opinions are often helpful.

Maintenance performed since I've owned it:
Tie Rods (ACDelco), FR Wheel Hubs (Timken), FR rotors/pads March 2022
Knock Sensors (ACDelco) August 2022
R rotors/pads October 2023
ACDelco spark plugs/Summit wires July 2024
x4 Goodyear Wrangler tires August 2025
Oil changes every 3-4K (Mobil 1 High Mileage/ACDelco filters)

What I know it needs, not necessarily mechanical-related:
Master window switch - functional other than FR passenger window, will try to clean it before replacing
PASS R window regulator - cable is frayed
Wiper fluid reservoir - leaks, but is a PITA to swap so low priority

What I am considering doing and why:
FR & R diff fluid - no issues, but I have no knowledge of whether this has been performed previously or not.
FR & R shocks - FR look to be original Delphi and R were replaced w/ Bilstein at an unknown point. Rear air compressor still works fine, no signs of leaking shocks.
Coolant drain & fill - I know there is a small coolant leak somewhere, I add about a half-gallon of DexCool maybe once a year, but no obvious major leaks and no overheating issues thus far.
Trans fluid drain/fill + filter - Trans fluid looks fine, does not leak fluid so I am on the fence about this one. I have never added fluid and have no knowledge of when/if the fluid/filter have been changed previously.

I am very much of the "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" mindset, so I am hesitant to do anything that may create more problems. Currently runs/drives/shifts great, and has been on many long-distance trips in the 4 years I've owned it. No plans to sell, probably ever.

Any insight, additional areas of emphasis, or experience is appreciated. Thanks

PFA:
IMG_6032.jpg
 

Joseph Garcia

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Beautiful truck, but I can't help you directly on the GMT800 series. Fortunately, there are a number of folks here who can.
 

mountie

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Wiper fluid reservoir is easier to change than you think. ( I did mine twice ( ’05 Yukon )….
Remove battery ( attach small power-jumper to wire leads to maintain computer memory before disconnecting from battery)
Remove battery tray.
Turn wheel to right.
2 pumps have different harness connectors, but note which pump goes where.
Just 2 or 3 screws on top, & 2 underneath to remove reservoir.
30 minutes or more to do.
( Tip )… buy new front/rear pumps… while you are at it.

One full gallon to refill.

Gorgeous ride !!
 

swathdiver

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My daughter put about 40K on those fancy red Summit plug wires until one started a misfire. Put one of her old ones back on and the misfire disappeared. Then she ordered new wires.

If yours were mine, I'd keep up with severe service schedule maintenance and not touch anything unless it needs attention.
 

mountie

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If your sway bars are OEM, they are just hollow pipes. Very light weight….
Get real bars. I have Helwig bars front & rear…. they weight around 40 lbs and SOLID…. huge improvement. HUGE !!
From the look of your ride height, you may already have them.
 

Doubeleive

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for what it is worth the washer fluid tanks generally never leak, what does happen is one of the pump motors is probably cracked and leaking OR the seal where it is inserted into the tank is bad. you can determine which is the case by just looking, use a flashlight and look up from underneath. If the tank is full below the upper pump the upper pump is leaking, if the tank is full under the lower pump then the lower pump is leaking. you can also fill it up and get back under it and see where the drips are coming from.
as for the fluids flush ALL, brake, power steering, transmission, transfer case, front & rear diff.
your coolant leak appears to be pretty minor if you are only adding once a year, but also can generally be found with a flashlight and a telescoping tilt mirror, one place to check is the water pump weep hole, sides and bottom of radiator, heater hose "T's" and "Y".
 

mountie

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for what it is worth the washer fluid tanks generally never leak, what does happen is one of the pump motors is probably cracked and leaking OR the seal where it is inserted into the tank is bad. you can determine which is the case by just looking, use a flashlight and look up from underneath. If the tank is full below the upper pump the upper pump is leaking, if the tank is full under the lower pump then the lower pump is leaking. you can also fill it up and get back under it and see where the drips are coming from.
as for the fluids flush ALL, brake, power steering, transmission, transfer case, front & rear diff.
your coolant leak appears to be pretty minor if you are only adding once a year, but also can generally be found with a flashlight and a telescoping tilt mirror, one place to check is the water pump weep hole, sides and bottom of radiator, heater hose "T's" and "Y".
I agree if it’s not the tank….. But I found it easier to check & as needed, replace the pump off the truck….
Unless you can raise the truck high enough to get underneath.
Also… removing the wheel will be better to see…. I didn’t remove the wheel….
 

Doubeleive

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I agree if it’s not the tank….. But I found it easier to check & as needed, replace the pump off the truck….
Unless you can raise the truck high enough to get underneath.
Also… removing the wheel will be better to see…. I didn’t remove the wheel….
If you just jack it up a little bit, there is a clear view from straight underneath (just look up).
from there you can replace the bottom pump without doing anything else, just use a tool to unclip the power harness and then it pops out.
the upper pump can be done as you described above by pulling the battery, remove the battery tray, unbolt the bottom bolt for the tank and then you can lift it up a bit and do the upper pump.
you can also remove the front left wheel, remove some clips and pull the splash guard back but it's not required.
 

Doubeleive

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I could be wrong it's been a while, you might have to unbolt the top and drop it down a little bit to do the bottom pump from the bottom.
but the view is clear from straight under, to determine where the leak is
the tanks are usually pretty hardy unless you got in a accident and cracked it.
 
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tooleyondeck

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If your sway bars are OEM, they are just hollow pipes. Very light weight….
Get real bars. I have Helwig bars front & rear…. they weight around 40 lbs and SOLID…. huge improvement. HUGE !!
From the look of your ride height, you may already have them.
If I end up lifting it in the future Ive already noted the Helwigs and the go to for away bars, the suspension is stock for now though, and despite the MT tires, it rarely goes off road more than a field or dirt roads.
 

mountie

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If I end up lifting it in the future Ive already noted the Helwigs and the go to for away bars, the suspension is stock for now though, and despite the MT tires, it rarely goes off road more than a field or dirt roads.
Other than sway bars, you do have a ‘truck’….. the suspension is pretty stout.
 
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tooleyondeck

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Front & Rear diff fluid change went smoothly. I used Valvoline 75W-90 w/LSD and a Felpro rear diff gasket.

Confirmed the wiper reservoir leak is coming from where the lower pump connects to the reservoir. Not having luck finding a new seal for it, maybe some RTV will do the trick?

Decided against tranny fluid for now as there are no issues with the trans.

New window regulator and master window switch are on the way.. master switch is the A Premium one so I will monitor it closely for the parasitic drain issues some have reported.
 

mountie

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Front & Rear diff fluid change went smoothly. I used Valvoline 75W-90 w/LSD and a Felpro rear diff gasket.

Confirmed the wiper reservoir leak is coming from where the lower pump connects to the reservoir. Not having luck finding a new seal for it, maybe some RTV will do the trick?

Decided against tranny fluid for now as there are no issues with the trans.

New window regulator and master window switch are on the way.. master switch is the A Premium one so I will monitor it closely for the parasitic drain issues some have reported.
I had no luck finding a replacement rubber seal that would fit….. I just bought a new pump. ( I didn’t want to dig inside that area again to chase a second leak )
 

SilverSport

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does your Yukon Denali have an LSD or did you use LSD in your rear differential for another reason?...

am I reading correctly that your rear shocks were replaced with Bilstein shocks???...if so, what is your rear compressor able to do since you no longer have the Z55 Autoride unless Bilstein made those shocks at some time...

my understanding that without the Delphi (or some other aftermarket shock of the same type) rear shocks your rear compressor has nothing to do as replacement shocks don't have the "bladders" on them to level, raise or lower the rear end as designed...

thanks for any information you care to share...

Bill
 
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tooleyondeck

tooleyondeck

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does your Yukon Denali have an LSD or did you use LSD in your rear differential for another reason?...

am I reading correctly that your rear shocks were replaced with Bilstein shocks???...if so, what is your rear compressor able to do since you no longer have the Z55 Autoride unless Bilstein made those shocks at some time...

my understanding that without the Delphi (or some other aftermarket shock of the same type) rear shocks your rear compressor has nothing to do as replacement shocks don't have the "bladders" on them to level, raise or lower the rear end as designed...

thanks for any information you care to share...

Bill
They’re Bilsteins with air bladders so I assume they did, my compressor functions normally. I’ll try to take a pic with the model number if it’s legible.

Yes, my Yukon has 3.73 gears and an LSD as it is AWD. RPO is GT4 (clutch-type LSD)
 
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tooleyondeck

tooleyondeck

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If you wait til the transmission starts having issues before changing the fluid a lot of times it's too late. Fluid is cheaper then a new transmission.

I agree, but there are so many horror stories with these 4L60-series trans about issues starting after fluid changes. The fluid is still bright red and doesn’t leak so I’m going to push it to the right in the event there are issues afterwards I’ll be able to address them.
 

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