L87 6.2: “NHTSA to investigate potential for engine failure in nearly 1 million GM trucks, SUVs”

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.

Stbentoak

Full Access Member
Joined
Jul 20, 2020
Posts
1,731
Reaction score
2,007
In today's modern manufacturing, there is no excuse for cleaning out chips, debris, or FOD (That's what they call it in the aircraft manufacturing world..) As someone who has worked in the aircraft engine industry. this would get you disqualified as a supplier immediately. 2 main things....foreign objects and parts that are out of tolerance. More than one instance of this and you are out. Evidently this criterion doesn't apply with automotive suppliers or GM's internal manufacturing.....
 

jfoj

Full Access Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2012
Posts
159
Reaction score
93
While debris may be an issue with these engines, the oiling system is really in question. The 6.2l uses the same basic oiling system as the 6.0l non AFM/DFM engine and it was rock solid. My 20 year old 6.0l has 275k miles on it without the engine ever being opened up. Minimal mainteance and still going strong.

I think where GM went sideways on the 6.2l is they added 2 stage oil pump to reduce oil pressure under lower loads to save fuel along with the 0W20 engine oil. My 2005 6.0l has used 5W30 for 275k without a problem. Then they went from AFM which could control 4 cylinders to DFM which could control up to 7 cylinders at a time. The problem is the AFM requires oil pressure and volume to control the lifters, this oil pressure and volume is basically tanken away from the main bearings, so you can end up with oil starvation for the main bearings, especially the front main bearing which is the absolutely last thing lubricated in the oiling path.

I can see where DFM disabling can and provably will help these engines last longer, not sure if the oil pump could be fixed in the higher pressure mode without causing other problems, with the DFM and/or triggering a CEL. Maybe a spoof for the high pressure stage of the oil pump could be employed somehow?

After a lot of research it appears the front main and rod #1 & #2 are probably the most common failures, however, there have been #3 main/thrust failures and I have also seen rear main failures. Additionally I have seen many pistons destroyed and rods bent or breach the block. So there are an number of failure modes, probably nobody at the dealers or GM has really tracked the failures.

Seeing 2 basic issues here, possible contamination, or just plain oiling problems that lead to contamination as bearings and other parts start to come apart.

5.3l seem to have less problems, they do not have the 2 stage oil pump, they just have a variable displacement oil pump from my research. I have seen many 5.3l with lifter problems, not so many with bearing failures. But this is just what I have been able to find online and there are probably many failures that have not been documented online .
 

flajax

TYF Newbie
Joined
Sep 12, 2016
Posts
8
Reaction score
1
I have a 2021 with 55k miles on it, has anyone done a blackstone oil analysis on a higher mileage engine to see if there's anything out of the ordinary prior to failure? I'm in FL, and have avoided the 0w20 oil; hell might go change it again today and send some over to blackstone.
 

CMoore711

Full Access Member
Joined
Jul 18, 2017
Posts
1,303
Reaction score
1,133
I have just submitted all my info to the NHTSA.

I think this is the best thing any GM SUV owner with a 6.2L L87 that has experienced engine failure can do. Submit your experience and vehicle details to the NHTSA. Not sure what that process looks like or includes; I'm sure it might take some time, effort, and documentation.

Whether you still own the vehicle or not.
Whether GM repaired your vehicle with a new engine replacement or not.

Being proactive and providing more information to the NHTSA could influence/impact the NHTSA to force GM's hand to admit they have a problem, develop an actual solution, and implement the corrective action on GM's dime.
 

MattAlaska

TYF Newbie
Joined
Mar 3, 2015
Posts
6
Reaction score
1
Location
Alaska
I think this is the best thing any GM SUV owner with a 6.2L L87 that has experienced engine failure can do. Submit your experience and vehicle details to the NHTSA. Not sure what that process looks like or includes; I'm sure it might take some time, effort, and documentation.

Whether you still own the vehicle or not.
Whether GM repaired your vehicle with a new engine replacement or not.

Being proactive and providing more information to the NHTSA could influence/impact the NHTSA to force GM's hand to admit they have a problem, develop an actual solution, and implement the corrective action on GM's dime.
It's actually much easier than I expected. Definitely recommend.
 

blanchard7684

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 23, 2024
Posts
109
Reaction score
23
Being proactive and providing more information to the NHTSA could influence/impact the NHTSA to force GM's hand to admit they have a problem, develop an actual solution, and implement the corrective action on GM's dime.
You'd think the warranty costs, buy-backs, and lemon-law action would be enough.
 

blanchard7684

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 23, 2024
Posts
109
Reaction score
23
Seeing 2 basic issues here, possible contamination, or just plain oiling problems that lead to contamination as bearings and other parts start to come apart.

5.3l seem to have less problems, they do not have the 2 stage oil pump, they just have a variable displacement oil pump from my research. I have seen many 5.3l with lifter problems, not so many with bearing failures. But this is just what I have been able to find online and there are probably many failures that have not been documented online .

I think this is accurate.

The failed bearings I've seen so far look like contamination or a light to moderate oil starvation. Both can look similar on failed journal bearings for basically the same reason--deterioration of oil film integrity.

The oil flow diagrams you've linked to are helpful as well. It does show that the #1 and #2 mains could be more susceptible for damage from loss of pressure.

If a 2 stage pump is glitchy switching between stages it could cause a momentary drop in system pressure (how much of a drop, who knows?). it may also cause a miss timed switch event on lifters. I wonder what the correlation is between failed rod and main bearings and damage on lifters and cam?

5.3 and 6.2 have different oil pump part numbers so I can believe they would be different pumps.
 

B-train

Full Access Member
Joined
Sep 12, 2022
Posts
2,360
Reaction score
4,109
Below is first oil change from ‘24 5.3… iron and aluminum in the bottom of my drain bucket… if you at it you can see it.. i think drain - a couple anyway before 1500 miles.

I still am thinking a drop in cleaning or suppliers.. of the rocker or lifters.. there is just no way you want to run that oil for 7500 miles.. yikes!! There is a lot of boring and tapping going on.. to build the block. It might be cleaning is less..
Or, it might be a brilliant plan to piss people off about V8 engines so they will more easily swallow the 4 or 6 cylinder pill GM had been wanting people to accept(?????)
 

RG23RST

TYF Newbie
Joined
Oct 6, 2024
Posts
16
Reaction score
12
Both the L84 & L87/L8T pumps have a high stage and low stage so they aren't that different in some respects. They aren't interchangeable though. The pumps are high volume to offset the lower relative viscosity of the oil. There isn't any functional difference between a 0w20 at the high end of the API spec and a 5w30 at the low end of its spec. Oil pressure is controlled via the ECM and oil pump control solenoid on both. L8T doesn't have the bottom end problems as the 6.2 does. It's been a supplier issue is my understanding with the bearings.

0w20 oil isn't going to hurt the engines but I have run 5w30 in mine during summer for no other reason than it was on the shelf and 0w20 wasn't that day for whatever reason. Some say the valvetrain is quieter on Xw30 oils so YMMV. After 60K miles I'll swap this one over fully to 5w30 just like I did the last one but you do you.
 
Top