I have recently experienced a lifter issue in my 2013 GMC Yukon Denali 6.2L. I was driving down the road and it sounded like a spring broke and immediate rattling in the engine. I got the truck towed home and started removing the valve cover where i discovered cylinder 6 rocker arm not moving after the vehicle was running. I proceeded to remove the passenger side head and pulled the lifters and lifter guides. The old stuff i removed, the lifter did not come apart and was not springy. The only issue i saw was that the lifter was spinning freely in the lifter guide where as the new lifters slide up in the new lifter guide was very tight and did not spin freely. I replaced all 4 AFM lifters, lifter guides, head gasket, intake gasket, exhaust manifold gaskets, new head bolts and new exhaust manifold bolts (just because they were a pain.) I did not soak the lifters prior to installation but i did grease up the rollers. I checked the camshaft by rolling it and it didnt look bad so i didnt do anything with the camshaft. I put everything back together and the truck ran great for about 50 miles or so. I got the cylinder 6 misfire code and have started the process over again. I currently have the valve cover off and the rocker arm is stuck again. I have not pulled the head or went anymore in depth but im assuming it is the same issue.
My questions are:
1. What would cause the lifter to get stuck and spin in the lifter guide?
2. Is there a way to correct this without doing the full AFM DOD delete?
3. Should i just go ahead and do the AFM DOD delete?
I attached a picture of the empty lifter holes that show down in the camshaft. The left hole, there is no issue. The right hole is the one that failed.
My questions are:
1. What would cause the lifter to get stuck and spin in the lifter guide?
2. Is there a way to correct this without doing the full AFM DOD delete?
3. Should i just go ahead and do the AFM DOD delete?
I attached a picture of the empty lifter holes that show down in the camshaft. The left hole, there is no issue. The right hole is the one that failed.