Just sharing my experience for others... seams to be a common issue.
2015 Suburban LTZ (Z95 suspension code) 96,000 miles
So the magnetic struts and shocks were worn out. Front left strut made rattling noise/leaking, right rear shock was frozen stiff. It was riding extremely harsh. Even before it rode too much like a sports car to me and didn't have the plush ride I would expect from a big SUV. I didn't want to replace them all at $300 a piece so started researching options. I also didn't have faith in the new magnetic suspension lasting beyond 40k-50k miles. To me it was too much of a gamble and in the end I'd have a suspension that I probably wouldn't have been happy with.
I researched some options on removing the magnetic system. Found a company that makes simulators for the computer so no codes, etc are thrown. I went with a Magnetic Suspension Delete kit made by X-ineering. http://xineering.com/shocksims.html
It all simply plugs into the factory harness connections for the strut/shocks and then for the ride height/level sensors. I wanted to keep the rear air shocks so I did not bypass the rear ride height/level sensors. I only bypassed the front sensors completely.
Used a quick-strut assembly Monroe 139104 for the front. Put ACDelco 540-1675 air shocks in the rear. Knocked it out over the weekend in the garage.
WOW, what a difference in the ride! Now the Suburban soaks up the bumps MUCH softer and gives more of a "riding on air" feel without sacrificing the handling/control feel either. I don't feel every small bump in the road anymore. We live in the country and usually drive on roads that aren't maintained that well so having a softer riding suspension is important to me. So, if anyone is on the fence about replacing their magnetic system, hopefully this info will help making the decision easier.
2015 Suburban LTZ (Z95 suspension code) 96,000 miles
So the magnetic struts and shocks were worn out. Front left strut made rattling noise/leaking, right rear shock was frozen stiff. It was riding extremely harsh. Even before it rode too much like a sports car to me and didn't have the plush ride I would expect from a big SUV. I didn't want to replace them all at $300 a piece so started researching options. I also didn't have faith in the new magnetic suspension lasting beyond 40k-50k miles. To me it was too much of a gamble and in the end I'd have a suspension that I probably wouldn't have been happy with.
I researched some options on removing the magnetic system. Found a company that makes simulators for the computer so no codes, etc are thrown. I went with a Magnetic Suspension Delete kit made by X-ineering. http://xineering.com/shocksims.html
It all simply plugs into the factory harness connections for the strut/shocks and then for the ride height/level sensors. I wanted to keep the rear air shocks so I did not bypass the rear ride height/level sensors. I only bypassed the front sensors completely.
Used a quick-strut assembly Monroe 139104 for the front. Put ACDelco 540-1675 air shocks in the rear. Knocked it out over the weekend in the garage.
WOW, what a difference in the ride! Now the Suburban soaks up the bumps MUCH softer and gives more of a "riding on air" feel without sacrificing the handling/control feel either. I don't feel every small bump in the road anymore. We live in the country and usually drive on roads that aren't maintained that well so having a softer riding suspension is important to me. So, if anyone is on the fence about replacing their magnetic system, hopefully this info will help making the decision easier.