Chert_Detective
Supporting Member
- Joined
- May 4, 2017
- Posts
- 158
- Reaction score
- 438
I don't buy the whole, "GM fixed this around 2010" spiel. In my opinion, it is a flawed design and I will never own an AFM truck. The two trucks in my sig do not have AFM. If I have to, I'll get a Ram or Super Duty before I get AFM.
That being said, what I've seen and read is that it will act up most likely from 75k-100k miles, with collapsed lifter(s). If the engine makes it to 100k-125k with no issues, you got a good one.
Once, when I was looking to buy, I saw a used 08 Avalanche for sale with 96k miles that had just had the engine replaced. That, I would have bought. And then immediately disabled the AFM.
If I was to end up with an AFM vehicle I would delete it. It would be a good excuse for a nice cam.
Purposely bought my '08 for this exact reason. Bought it with 147k miles in 2017, no AFM, good service history, etc. About 185k-ish I got "the tap". Showed up, never went away never got worse. Around 190 I decided I wanted to keep it and dump the money I did into it and have a fun bada$$ daily vs spending the money on something new, boring, and depreciating. So I started gathering parts.
Upon tear down, only one lifter was bad but was on its way to being completely toast and wiping the cam. And this was the #7 piston, couldn't tell you when it happened, engine never gave me any signs.