Jay P Wy
Member
That's all well and good but if the mechanic doesn't understand and isn't giving the engineers the correct info then the answer they are getting back is useless (trouble codes alone are not accurate info). Your 22 may have been a lemon but the 24 hasn't risen to that level yet. All problems are fixable given a good mechanic getting to the root cause of an issue and not just throwing parts at it based on trouble codes. Sometimes repairs are cost prohibitive and then the dealer/repair shop/manufacturer won't or will recommend not repairing it.With 22 GM got involved with the dealer fairly early on. The dealer was carrying out exactly what the engineers and GM tech had instructed. They made 7 failed attempts to fix it. When this happened again with the 24 , I just said to them we can't afford going through this again; for 2 years the truck cannot stay in their maintenance shops more than it can be with us.
A good friend recently retired as a service manager of a Chevrolet/Cadillac dealer in MN and the stories he told of what mechanics do amazed me. They get paid based on a flat rate manual/chart and they don't like to work on hard cases because they loose money based and the flat rate chart (ie they get paid 2 hrs to replace a valve cover gasket whether it takes 1 hour or 3 hours). Warranty work is even worse because the manufacturer decides how much to pay and it rarely covers the cost the dealer incurs.
All manufacturers have lemons/issues since they are designed and built by humans and none of us are perfect.