Keep my Tahoe?

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

adventurenali92

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 16, 2015
Posts
7,415
Reaction score
8,665
Location
Big Bear Lake, ca
Have the small spots over the wheel wells fixed, get the fluids all replaced, and throw a new set of wheels on it. That’s WAY CHEAPER, than payments on a newer one. And you know what yours is going to need. 80k is nothing in a GM engine. That rig has a lot of life left in it. Wheels can be had just about anywhere on the internet these days, whether it be a used AWD on Craigslist, or a new take off set, or brand new replicas. Replacing all the fluids is cheap insurance to keep your rig running good and strong.
 

Joseph Garcia

Supporting Member
Joined
Aug 2, 2018
Posts
7,503
Reaction score
10,241
I say keep it, and perform any repairs/touch-ups that you believe that you need to make. You know what you have now, and if you purchase a replacement truck, you will have to re-learn all of the problems with the replacement truck, and then you will have to address them as required.

Regarding wheel air leaks, have the wheel bead areas dressed up/polished with a very fine grit abrasive sanding power tool, apply bead sealant, and re-mount the tires. I had 3 wheel/tire/bead leaks on my new-to-me 07 Yukon XL Denali, when I purchased it, and I had this work performed by my local repair shop. Since then, I have not wheel air leaks.
 

1BADI5

Supporting Member
Joined
Feb 2, 2014
Posts
1,833
Reaction score
2,988
Location
DMV
Have the small spots over the wheel wells fixed, get the fluids all replaced, and throw a new set of wheels on it. That’s WAY CHEAPER, than payments on a newer one. And you know what yours is going to need. 80k is nothing in a GM engine. That rig has a lot of life left in it. Wheels can be had just about anywhere on the internet these days, whether it be a used AWD on Craigslist, or a new take off set, or brand new replicas. Replacing all the fluids is cheap insurance to keep your rig running good and strong.

Basically everything I was going to say.

Cheaper to keep em
 

cfmistry

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 5, 2018
Posts
249
Reaction score
422
I agree with the other guys. 80k is nothing, lots of life left. If you're itching for a new truck then go ahead and scratch that, but if you are happy with what you have then keep it.
 

petethepug

Michael
Joined
May 4, 2016
Posts
3,122
Reaction score
3,441
Location
SoCal
Keep it or trade up a year or two if you’ve got the itch for a change. Fix the bubbles, apply oil based undercoat.

Depreciation is going to hit the 15+ Tahoe / Yuke / Burb / Esky hard as the Turbo Diesel and full EV drive trains are released.

Eventually, the competition will drive the cost of new drive trains down. I’d say hang out and watch what happens for a while. [emoji897]


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
 

2010gmcyukon

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Posts
306
Reaction score
220
Location
Midwest
Are you sure the air leak is through the rims? I had a slow leak on one of my truck tires (that were on the truck when I bought it). I saw no visible holes or cracks. I finally got sick of dealing with it and replaced the tires. Turned out there were 3 patches on that one tire...
 

Big Sal

TYF Newbie
Joined
Jan 2, 2021
Posts
1
Reaction score
0
I am new to he site - I have my 2008 Tahoe with 265K on it and I still love it - what is film fluid and how does it encapsulate the rust - I am interested in it - thanks
 

EvergreenZ71

Full Access Member
Joined
May 29, 2020
Posts
116
Reaction score
75
Location
Washington
You didn’t mention color, and I only ask because I really want fender flares (and chrome delete) on my 2009 6.2l Tahoe, but it’s Champaign (pearl) white and the place that did them for my 2500 suburban said white is the hardest to blend.

But I’m x2 on spending a little to patch the rust, seal it from getting worse, and stick with the reliability you know over the gamble of a replacement used vehicle unless professional image is a critical value for the truck.
 

Bigshawn

Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2018
Posts
92
Reaction score
66
Location
Mercersburg, PA
Yeah, another opinion question. I have a 2010 Tahoe LT 4WD with 80K miles. Runs good, doesn't burn oil, but is due for all the fluids to be changed. It has minimal rust for a Wisconsin truck. The underside actually looks better than a 2016 I looked at a few months ago. The are (2) 3/32" paint bubbles on the wheel arch of the passenger side fear fender, which I know is a place for rust to start. The 20" rims of course look like crap, and 3 of them have slow air leaks thru the rims.

If this were a truck from a rust free area, I wouldn't even ask the question, but I would keep it. But I wonder if I should look at something newer from a rust free area? There are a few low mileage '13's or '14's out there (I would look at all 3 brands) but prices seem excessive. Or they have 100K+ miles. If I go next Gen, I think I would avoid '15-16's and look for a '17 or newer. But hose are expensive around here as well and the few I have looked at looked like they sat in the ocean for a year, at least the undersides. Plus I'd be lucky to get $10K trade on mine. So, do I keep it and throw some fender flares on it when the wheel arches rust or look for something newer? As much as I drive lately, I could just wait 5 years and buy something at that time. I know this is really my decision, just looking for some opinions, good or bad!
I would keep if I was you but if you want to sell I'll give ya 10k cash for it.
 

Fless

Staff member
Super Moderator
Joined
Apr 2, 2017
Posts
12,176
Reaction score
24,846
Location
Elev 5,280
I am new to he site - I have my 2008 Tahoe with 265K on it and I still love it - what is film fluid and how does it encapsulate the rust - I am interested in it - thanks

Eric O. shows how he uses the lanolin-based fluid film to protect his truck:

 

Forum statistics

Threads
132,779
Posts
1,874,162
Members
97,616
Latest member
tygbenn
Top