man these threads are just painful to read.
I honestly don't know what I'd do in your position without repairing cars most of my life. it's just painful to watch.
when I say it's amazing what they charged you don't take it as a knock on you. I'm sure I've been taken a lot of times in fields I don't know much about. I'm just blown away they can charge that for a sensor that I just walked into gm parts dealer a few months ago and paid like 60$ for with tax. ugh.
I like the add oil idea and to check the o ring, and then personally I'd change it and put a thicker 15w40 or something in and drive it till it's atleast got a knock or some sign something actually wrong before replacing an engine. in the mean time, I think I'd consider after watching some YouTubes, buy a oem gm sensor and screen from rock auto and try changing it yourself. it's not fun but the sensor and price of a tool kit you'll spend less than they billed you for just a sensor of a unknown brand and quality or if they actually did change the screen. we don't know that they actually removed the intake, because you really don't need to but it does make the screen easier to get out. I don't know a flat rate tech alive that will remove a whole intake when there's a simple short cut. it's the reason they spend 1000s of dollars on the tool truck for special tools.
I honestly don't know what I'd do in your position without repairing cars most of my life. it's just painful to watch.
when I say it's amazing what they charged you don't take it as a knock on you. I'm sure I've been taken a lot of times in fields I don't know much about. I'm just blown away they can charge that for a sensor that I just walked into gm parts dealer a few months ago and paid like 60$ for with tax. ugh.
I like the add oil idea and to check the o ring, and then personally I'd change it and put a thicker 15w40 or something in and drive it till it's atleast got a knock or some sign something actually wrong before replacing an engine. in the mean time, I think I'd consider after watching some YouTubes, buy a oem gm sensor and screen from rock auto and try changing it yourself. it's not fun but the sensor and price of a tool kit you'll spend less than they billed you for just a sensor of a unknown brand and quality or if they actually did change the screen. we don't know that they actually removed the intake, because you really don't need to but it does make the screen easier to get out. I don't know a flat rate tech alive that will remove a whole intake when there's a simple short cut. it's the reason they spend 1000s of dollars on the tool truck for special tools.