2022 Chevy Silverado LT trail boss

2,289 Views | 30 Replies | Last: 23 hrs ago by Mas89
TexMexAggie1
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Looking to buy a truck that's listed above.
Is this a good truck? What should I look out for? Give me all the details you truck gurus!
aggieforester05
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
5.3L and 6.2L lifter failure lottery
3.0L timing belt behind the engine (150K to 200K mile service depending on the year)

Body dents if you breathe on it wrong.

Some are built in Mexico.

Engine and transmission drive great if 6.2L. 5.3L is known to be underpowered. I've only driven the latter at elevation in a Suburban and it was certainly underpowered there. No experience with the 3.0L, but people like them. I had a 2020 6.2L RST Silverado for four years.

If you're a performance oriented driver at all, the 10 speed is lacking true manual controls and sport mode is a joke. Otherwise, it's very smooth and is pretty quick with the 6.2L. The 6.2L has a lot of grunt that makes it fun to drive at part throttle.

Fuel economy with the 6.2L was 14.7 lifetime but could get 21 on the highway. Premium fuel required in the 6.2L.
TexMexAggie1
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Dang. The one I'm looking at has the 5.3L.
TexMexAggie1
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Everything in the carfax is clean also.
TexMexAggie1
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I would use it as a daily driver. Especially out on the construction sites.
Kyle Field Shade Chaser
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
TexMexAggie1 said:

Dang. The one I'm looking at has the 5.3L.


The 5.3 has plenty of power unless you plan to tow heavy loads. If you are not towing all the time, the 5.3 is PERFECTLY fine power wise.
TexMexAggie1
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Perfect. The most I'd haul is a round bale in the back on the weekends lol
1agswitchin4lanes
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
aggieforester05 said:

5.3L and 6.2L lifter failure lottery
3.0L timing belt behind the engine (150K to 200K mile service depending on the year)

Body dents if you breathe on it wrong.

Some are built in Mexico.

Engine and transmission drive great if 6.2L. 5.3L is known to be underpowered. I've only driven the latter at elevation in a Suburban and it was certainly underpowered there. No experience with the 3.0L, but people like them. I had a 2020 6.2L RST Silverado for four years.

If you're a performance oriented driver at all, the 10 speed is lacking true manual controls and sport mode is a joke. Otherwise, it's very smooth and is pretty quick with the 6.2L. The 6.2L has a lot of grunt that makes it fun to drive at part throttle.

Fuel economy with the 6.2L was 14.7 lifetime but could get 21 on the highway. Premium fuel required in the 6.2L.


You hit all the points.
Bigballin
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Ford board gonna Ford

Old man just bought a new LT Trail Boss with a 5.3L; plenty of power and the 10 speed is smooth.
TecRecAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I have a 22 TB with the 5.3. Been just fine for 40,000 miles.
sts7049
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
get some strong theft protection
HumbleAg04
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
This is a very vocal F-150 board. Great truck. Go for it.

Can disable the AFM/DFM for $200 and solve the lifter issue.
aggieforester05
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
HumbleAg04 said:

This is a very vocal F-150 board. Great truck. Go for it.

Can disable the AFM/DFM for $200 and solve the lifter issue.


That will not solve the lifter issue. It might help prevent it, but the bigger problem is the lifter design. The roller freezes up and eats into the cam, sending metal shavings through your oil system. The only way to prevent it completely is to pull the heads, replace the lifters, swap cams, and delete the DOD equipment, then tune. About $4K - $5K to delete, $8K -$10K to repair after the fact (if you fix it right which means replace the engine thanks to metal in your oil system). You could do all the work yourself for $2K - $3K before the failure, if you're mechanically inclined.

That being said, once you do the delete, you should have a really solid engine that will go for 250K+ miles with little drama.

Hemis have lifter issues, ecoboost have cam phaser issues, coyotes have had a few issues depending on generation, and even some 7.3L Fords (without DOD) have experienced lifter failure. Pick your poison.

Manufacturers have had to sacrifice reliability across the board to satisfy federal regulators and it isn't getting any better anytime soon.
aggieforester05
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
TexMexAggie1 said:

I would use it as a daily driver. Especially out on the construction sites.
That's what I used mine for. It was good for that, just be careful putting stuff in the bed or knocking mud off your boots on the rocker. It dents easy. I ended up pulling the rocker panel dents out with PDR glue and I could actually push the high spots back down with my thumb.

No problems towing any half ton sized trailer, which I tow a lot. Tow Haul mode works much better than sport mode. The 4wd system is great, I had it in a lot of precarious situations and the only time it ever got stuck was when the rear wheel got stuck between two logs.

The floor mat system provides great coverage for muddy boots. Five cup holders accessible from the front seat was great for all of the various drinks you take to job sites.

No storage behind the rear seat, but they had the little seat cubbies which was nice.

The suspension system was tuned really good when you didn't have a payload. I carried a lot of tools most of my ownership and it definitely got a little bouncy when loaded down. I beat the **** out of it the first year I had it driving down really rough oil field roads and it still rode good unloaded when I traded it in at 70K miles.
AustinCountyAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
aggieforester05 said:

5.3L and 6.2L lifter failure lottery
3.0L timing belt behind the engine (150K to 200K mile service depending on the year)

Body dents if you breathe on it wrong.

Some are built in Mexico.

Engine and transmission drive great if 6.2L. 5.3L is known to be underpowered. I've only driven the latter at elevation in a Suburban and it was certainly underpowered there. No experience with the 3.0L, but people like them. I had a 2020 6.2L RST Silverado for four years.

If you're a performance oriented driver at all, the 10 speed is lacking true manual controls and sport mode is a joke. Otherwise, it's very smooth and is pretty quick with the 6.2L. The 6.2L has a lot of grunt that makes it fun to drive at part throttle.

Fuel economy with the 6.2L was 14.7 lifetime but could get 21 on the highway. Premium fuel required in the 6.2L.
recommended, not required
Ag for Life
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
HumbleAg04 said:

This is a very vocal F-150 board. Great truck. Go for it.

Can disable the AFM/DFM for $200 and solve the lifter issue.

The 5.3 and 6.2 are good engines, but a $200 electrical disabling device does not "solve" the issue. It's a good bandaid, but you have to physically remove the 8 DOD/AFM lifters, physically plug the 8 oil towers in the valley, and retune it in order to actually solve the problem.

The real culprit is the EPA and ridiculous CAFE standards for imaginary climate change and feelz.
aggieforester05
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
AustinCountyAg said:

aggieforester05 said:

5.3L and 6.2L lifter failure lottery
3.0L timing belt behind the engine (150K to 200K mile service depending on the year)

Body dents if you breathe on it wrong.

Some are built in Mexico.

Engine and transmission drive great if 6.2L. 5.3L is known to be underpowered. I've only driven the latter at elevation in a Suburban and it was certainly underpowered there. No experience with the 3.0L, but people like them. I had a 2020 6.2L RST Silverado for four years.

If you're a performance oriented driver at all, the 10 speed is lacking true manual controls and sport mode is a joke. Otherwise, it's very smooth and is pretty quick with the 6.2L. The 6.2L has a lot of grunt that makes it fun to drive at part throttle.

Fuel economy with the 6.2L was 14.7 lifetime but could get 21 on the highway. Premium fuel required in the 6.2L.
recommended, not required
A lot of people get away with running regular gas, but I wouldn't do it. The engine detects knock and pulls timing to account for fuel less than 91 octane. By the time the knock sensors kick in the detonation is already occurring, which can cause damage to the piston surface, cylinder walls, and rod bearings. Furthermore, you're losing hp/tq and fuel economy by doing so. Both the Ram 5.7L (89) and Nissan 5.6L (91) recommend higher grade fuel as well. The 6.2L has fairly high compression and some of that detonation risk is mitigated with the cooling effects of direct injection, but it's designed for premium fuel and I don't think that's a bad thing considering it is a premium engine with an aggressive but relatively efficient combustion cycle.
JoeAggie1010
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I have a 21 RST 3.0 and enjoy driving it. A few positives are engine is quiet and smooth, while the transmission shifts seamlessly between gears. A few negatives are, I had an oil leak from an oil galley plug, and the front half shafts were changed due to leaking seal. Both were fixed under warranty. Hope this helps.
mm98
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Kyle Field Shade Chaser said:

TexMexAggie1 said:

Dang. The one I'm looking at has the 5.3L.


The 5.3 has plenty of power unless you plan to tow heavy loads. If you are not towing all the time, the 5.3 is PERFECTLY fine power wise.


Agree. I've owned three 5.3s as company vehicles and the only time it felt a little underpowered was when I would tow a 7200 cargo trailer or more. Anything 6K and under felt fine
George08
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
The 2022 may not have the AFM due to the chip shortage. This is good because that's what causes the lifter issues.
TommyGun
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Ag for Life said:

HumbleAg04 said:

This is a very vocal F-150 board. Great truck. Go for it.

Can disable the AFM/DFM for $200 and solve the lifter issue.

The 5.3 and 6.2 are good engines, but a $200 electrical disabling device does not "solve" the issue. It's a good bandaid, but you have to physically remove the 8 DOD/AFM lifters, physically plug the 8 oil towers in the valley, and retune it in order to actually solve the problem.

The real culprit is the EPA and ridiculous CAFE standards for imaginary climate change and feelz.


I've owned three 5.3Ls and driven them all to 200k with just the $200 disable. Just a few examples among hundred of thousands of trucks but I've never worried about it.
TexMexAggie1
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Update - I ended up purchasing it last weekend!
Heights Ag 06
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Congrats! Looks fantastic!
Sweating BulletS
How long do you want to ignore this user?
It's a beaut, Clark, it's a beaut!
Sweating BulletS
How long do you want to ignore this user?
aggieforester05 said:


... The roller freezes up and eats into the cam, sending metal shavings through your oil system.

That being said, once you do the delete, you should have a really solid engine that will go for 250K+ miles with little drama.

Manufacturers have had to sacrifice reliability across the board to satisfy federal regulators and it isn't getting any better anytime soon.
The two I have done the lifters failed collapsed. The roller was not frozen on either one. But yes, once repaired it will go 250K+ miles. And federal regulators are a problem.
tamuags08
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I'm sure this has been answered already but what does it cost to do the delete?

Assuming that completely voids your warranty?
GT_Aggie2015
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
tamuags08 said:

I'm sure this has been answered already but what does it cost to do the delete?

Assuming that completely voids your warranty?
To piggy back, any recommendations on who or where to take it to get it done in Houston area. I have a 23 Sierra SLT I want to do this to.
idAg09
How long do you want to ignore this user?
GT_Aggie2015 said:

tamuags08 said:

I'm sure this has been answered already but what does it cost to do the delete?

Assuming that completely voids your warranty?
To piggy back, any recommendations on who or where to take it to get it done in Houston area. I have a 23 Sierra SLT I want to do this to.


2018 Escalade here in Houston and interested too as I'm approaching 100k miles. Had a range in 2015 Denali and from what I've seen it it should work on the Escalade- should I just plug this in if I want to get another 50k miles out of it or get it done right and maybe re-sale value will be better?
aggieforester05
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
tamuags08 said:

I'm sure this has been answered already but what does it cost to do the delete?

Assuming that completely voids your warranty?


A reputable indy shop told me $4K -$5K.
Silvy
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Forester putting in work fighting the good fight

Aces Performance off of Fairmont in Pasadena (they have multiple locations) are the guy I recommend for AFM delete.
Mas89
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Knapp Chevrolet has the best deal I've priced for getting the General Motors Protection Plan extended warranty. They sell the GMPP regardless of where you purchased the vehicle.
I would not buy a new GM or Ford product without getting the long term extended warranty.
Refresh
Page 1 of 1
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.