tRidiot
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- Joined
- Dec 21, 2011
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My '04 Tahoe LT has nearly 300k miles. Replaced the motor with an LQ9 6.0 and had the trans rebuilt just 2 years ago. Oh, wait... ok it's been 3y. But less than 15,000 miles, I think.
I put Bilstein 5100s on in late 2017 when I did a slight lift, probably 30k miles since then. No more than 40k, but whatever. The last 18 months I've started doing a little bit of towing a trailer, but sometimes with a decently heavy load on the trailer. Mostly hauling some wood for the smokers, once hauled 3 large propane tanks (2 250s and a 500) that were empty a few hundred miles. Not heavy-ass boats or anything.
Anyways, it seems a little sloppy, more sway the last year or two. A passenger commented on this and brought it (more) to my attention, he wondered if I had sway bar problems.
Moreso, though, I have lots of squeaking with any kind of bumps. I can't tell when driving if this is coming from front or rear, really. I can't seem to make it squeak from standing on the bumper and bouncing. The squeaking is with any small bumps on anything but the smoothest of roads. I do notice it 'tightens up' and goes away when braking coming down a hill. I don't know if this is because it puts more weight and tension on the front suspension or takes weight OFF the rear suspension. I thought this could have been a wheel bearing that a shop told me needed replaced (driver's front bearing), but after replacement of the wheel hub (Moog 515054) and inner/outer tie rods (Moog ES3488 & Moog ES3493T) in that position, it has remained and continued to worsen.
Most notably, when picking up a couple of ricks of wood a couple of weeks ago, the rear of the truck was REALLY squatted down badly. I was pretty tongue-loaded on the trailer, but it seemed to be a lot worse than I would have expected. Still had the squeaking when loaded and towing.
My question is, what am I looking for to evaluate my shocks from underneath? I can pull it into my friend's shop and get it on stands, but I'm not sure what I am looking for under there that might give me a clue? Worn bushings and that kind of thing ought to be pretty obvious, I'm sure - when I did the shocks in 2017 (again, 30-40k ago?) I did put in a Moog K80631 Stabilizer Bar Link Kit but didn't replace the stabilizer bar. At the same time I also put in Moog 81069 coil springs and did a slight key lift - like maybe 2-3"? So when I'm under there I'll inspect and look for cracking of bushings and things, but I just want to know how I can specifically tell if the shocks are shot, besides leaking fluid, of course. I don't mind replacing the shocks, I've watched some videos and this looks like a relatively easy job, but I hate to spend a couple hundred bucks right now and not end up fixing my problem. Things are extremely tight for us financially at the moment.
Tips?
I put Bilstein 5100s on in late 2017 when I did a slight lift, probably 30k miles since then. No more than 40k, but whatever. The last 18 months I've started doing a little bit of towing a trailer, but sometimes with a decently heavy load on the trailer. Mostly hauling some wood for the smokers, once hauled 3 large propane tanks (2 250s and a 500) that were empty a few hundred miles. Not heavy-ass boats or anything.
Anyways, it seems a little sloppy, more sway the last year or two. A passenger commented on this and brought it (more) to my attention, he wondered if I had sway bar problems.
Moreso, though, I have lots of squeaking with any kind of bumps. I can't tell when driving if this is coming from front or rear, really. I can't seem to make it squeak from standing on the bumper and bouncing. The squeaking is with any small bumps on anything but the smoothest of roads. I do notice it 'tightens up' and goes away when braking coming down a hill. I don't know if this is because it puts more weight and tension on the front suspension or takes weight OFF the rear suspension. I thought this could have been a wheel bearing that a shop told me needed replaced (driver's front bearing), but after replacement of the wheel hub (Moog 515054) and inner/outer tie rods (Moog ES3488 & Moog ES3493T) in that position, it has remained and continued to worsen.
Most notably, when picking up a couple of ricks of wood a couple of weeks ago, the rear of the truck was REALLY squatted down badly. I was pretty tongue-loaded on the trailer, but it seemed to be a lot worse than I would have expected. Still had the squeaking when loaded and towing.
My question is, what am I looking for to evaluate my shocks from underneath? I can pull it into my friend's shop and get it on stands, but I'm not sure what I am looking for under there that might give me a clue? Worn bushings and that kind of thing ought to be pretty obvious, I'm sure - when I did the shocks in 2017 (again, 30-40k ago?) I did put in a Moog K80631 Stabilizer Bar Link Kit but didn't replace the stabilizer bar. At the same time I also put in Moog 81069 coil springs and did a slight key lift - like maybe 2-3"? So when I'm under there I'll inspect and look for cracking of bushings and things, but I just want to know how I can specifically tell if the shocks are shot, besides leaking fluid, of course. I don't mind replacing the shocks, I've watched some videos and this looks like a relatively easy job, but I hate to spend a couple hundred bucks right now and not end up fixing my problem. Things are extremely tight for us financially at the moment.
Tips?