MickeyD
TYF Newbie
- Joined
- Nov 2, 2019
- Posts
- 20
- Reaction score
- 7
Good evening all.
I have an issue with my truck that I'm hoping I can get help with. For reference, it's a 2009 Tahoe 4x4 5.3 flex fuel, with 153,000 miles on it.
The problem I have had is that when I first accelerate from a stop, I hear a severe grinding noise that seems to come from the front driver wheel. It almost sounds like grinding gears in a manual. The sound is there only in the first 5-10 MPH of speed, then once I'm up to speed, it's gone.
Now, this truck has not been driven hard. However, in the past 6 months or so, I've started towing with it intermittently. It's a 10,000 pound equipment trailer, and I've towed tractors, building supplies, etc. intermittently. This week, we had 3 days in a row of a lot of towing on country roads (read: lots of hills). It was on the last day on the way home that I first noticed the sound when pulling away from a traffic light (that morning we had 7,500 pounds behind the truck, at the time of the problem we had 3,500 pounds behind it).
After getting home, and spending a bit of time with the truck, we realized the driver side motor mount was completely dead. Now, I had the mount replaced only 13,000 miles ago. I had bought what was available at Advance (an Anchor mount), then realized that it was beyond me to replace because of the truck being a 4x4, so I took the truck and the mount to my local dealer (with whom my family has a great relationship with) and they put in my Anchor mount.
It's only now that I read just how horrible the Anchor mounts can be. Lesson learned there. I now have an appointment with the dealership to have a new mount installed (this time, it's OEM or whatever they have at the dealership).
My question is, though, what exactly would have been rubbing to cause the sound. I understand that the recent increased torque load can wreak havoc on an old drive train. I just want to know what else I should look for. In one post somewhere online, I read that someone had the same behavior as me and it was the transmission mount. I also read somewhere that it can be a bad transmission torque dampener. I'm not sure what that is, or how to diagnose that.
So, I would like to know if anyone else has had the same problem, and if so, what exactly was causing the sound?
Thanks in advance!
I have an issue with my truck that I'm hoping I can get help with. For reference, it's a 2009 Tahoe 4x4 5.3 flex fuel, with 153,000 miles on it.
The problem I have had is that when I first accelerate from a stop, I hear a severe grinding noise that seems to come from the front driver wheel. It almost sounds like grinding gears in a manual. The sound is there only in the first 5-10 MPH of speed, then once I'm up to speed, it's gone.
Now, this truck has not been driven hard. However, in the past 6 months or so, I've started towing with it intermittently. It's a 10,000 pound equipment trailer, and I've towed tractors, building supplies, etc. intermittently. This week, we had 3 days in a row of a lot of towing on country roads (read: lots of hills). It was on the last day on the way home that I first noticed the sound when pulling away from a traffic light (that morning we had 7,500 pounds behind the truck, at the time of the problem we had 3,500 pounds behind it).
After getting home, and spending a bit of time with the truck, we realized the driver side motor mount was completely dead. Now, I had the mount replaced only 13,000 miles ago. I had bought what was available at Advance (an Anchor mount), then realized that it was beyond me to replace because of the truck being a 4x4, so I took the truck and the mount to my local dealer (with whom my family has a great relationship with) and they put in my Anchor mount.
It's only now that I read just how horrible the Anchor mounts can be. Lesson learned there. I now have an appointment with the dealership to have a new mount installed (this time, it's OEM or whatever they have at the dealership).
My question is, though, what exactly would have been rubbing to cause the sound. I understand that the recent increased torque load can wreak havoc on an old drive train. I just want to know what else I should look for. In one post somewhere online, I read that someone had the same behavior as me and it was the transmission mount. I also read somewhere that it can be a bad transmission torque dampener. I'm not sure what that is, or how to diagnose that.
So, I would like to know if anyone else has had the same problem, and if so, what exactly was causing the sound?
Thanks in advance!