We sent the lemon law letter to GMC and have been talking back and forth. They mentioned a component coverage letter that is supposed to be transferable. We do not intend to do a buyback with them since they are offering way less than another dealer for another manufacturer. Will accepting this component coverage letter negatively or positively affect my trade in value? We just want to make sure accepting this letter is not a mistake. I can’t find anything on the web or here aboit this.
I just bought a 6.2L 2021 Sierra AT4. Before I bought it I talked to my service guy at the dealership I have been using for years with my Yukon.
He stated from his experience the lifter problems are ongoing. He said it isn’t a large percentage of the fleet but the ones that exhibit the lifter failure do have an unacceptably higher percentage of repeat failures. He said if you go in for a repeat lifter failure, and you ask, GM will extend the powertrain portion to 100K miles. In his experience, the first failures occur before the first 10K miles and if it repeats, it usually does before 20K miles.
Clearly the biggest issue right now is supply chain woes making repair parts scarce and repair time’s unacceptably long.
I have my fingers crossed that if I do experience lifter issues, by that time, parts will be easier to come by.
He did say they are no longer doing partial repairs, but now replacing all the lifters in the engine, even if it is a single failure.
He also said he believes some of the problems may be related to recommended oil change intervals and the thin oil that is spec’ed by GM. He told me if my new truck was his, he would change the oil and filter at 1.5K and 3K and then use 5K intervals after that, and so I will.