TexasCowboy
New member
* Purchased used, had 96,000 or so miles on it, it's now at 104,000 so it is OUT OF WARRANTY
* Changed oil to Mobil 1 full synthetic about 300 miles ago, run only E85 in the engine to keep it cleaner.
* 1 mile from house, LOW OIL PRESSURE STOP IMMEDIATELY accompanied by chimes. Checked oil - barely registering on dipstick, other than that it had been between 40psi and 60psi consistently. Added 1.5 quarters, tried to drive home - half way there, LOW OIL PRESSURE STOP IMMEDIATELY.
* Had it flatbed trucked home, drained oil to inspect - what had been clear honey colored Mobil 1 was now jet black. Replaced with fresh 6 qt of Mobil 1 full synthetic, started again.
* Oil gauge will stay at 40psi for 2-3 minutes, then will progressively fall until it is near zero. Stop the engine for 30 seconds, restart and the same symptom.
Dealer quoted $1,260 to replace the pressure sending unit, ever so conveniently located on the rear of the engine and inaccessible unless you dismantle the top part of the engine or have hands the size of an elf.
Going to take it to my preferred dealer - Reliable Chevrolet in Richardson and ask them to diagnose the problem. From what I've read in the forums, it can be:
1. Spun bearning.
2. Dropped lifter.
3. AFM relief valve in oil pan.
4. Pressure sender filter screen.
5. Pressure sender.
6. Stuck rings due to AFM deactivation and carbon buildup.
7. Keebler elves - i mean really, can it be THAT hard to diagnose this problem?
I own 5 GM vehicles and have bought GM exclusively since 1992. My K1500 4WD never had this type of problem and I could work on that easily.
At this point, i'm going to ask the dealer to diagnose it and then take a hard look at replacing the engine with a new GM crate engine to get the warranty and a worry free 50,000 files on it. Since i'm out of warranty, this is going to be expensive, and my guess is in the $5,000-7,000 range for starters.
I'll post what happens, i'm assuming the dealer is going to diagnose it, get it wrong, have the problem recur, and then going through two or three fixes before it is actually solved - each time, charging me for the process.
* Changed oil to Mobil 1 full synthetic about 300 miles ago, run only E85 in the engine to keep it cleaner.
* 1 mile from house, LOW OIL PRESSURE STOP IMMEDIATELY accompanied by chimes. Checked oil - barely registering on dipstick, other than that it had been between 40psi and 60psi consistently. Added 1.5 quarters, tried to drive home - half way there, LOW OIL PRESSURE STOP IMMEDIATELY.
* Had it flatbed trucked home, drained oil to inspect - what had been clear honey colored Mobil 1 was now jet black. Replaced with fresh 6 qt of Mobil 1 full synthetic, started again.
* Oil gauge will stay at 40psi for 2-3 minutes, then will progressively fall until it is near zero. Stop the engine for 30 seconds, restart and the same symptom.
Dealer quoted $1,260 to replace the pressure sending unit, ever so conveniently located on the rear of the engine and inaccessible unless you dismantle the top part of the engine or have hands the size of an elf.
Going to take it to my preferred dealer - Reliable Chevrolet in Richardson and ask them to diagnose the problem. From what I've read in the forums, it can be:
1. Spun bearning.
2. Dropped lifter.
3. AFM relief valve in oil pan.
4. Pressure sender filter screen.
5. Pressure sender.
6. Stuck rings due to AFM deactivation and carbon buildup.
7. Keebler elves - i mean really, can it be THAT hard to diagnose this problem?
I own 5 GM vehicles and have bought GM exclusively since 1992. My K1500 4WD never had this type of problem and I could work on that easily.
At this point, i'm going to ask the dealer to diagnose it and then take a hard look at replacing the engine with a new GM crate engine to get the warranty and a worry free 50,000 files on it. Since i'm out of warranty, this is going to be expensive, and my guess is in the $5,000-7,000 range for starters.
I'll post what happens, i'm assuming the dealer is going to diagnose it, get it wrong, have the problem recur, and then going through two or three fixes before it is actually solved - each time, charging me for the process.
