Quark
Full Access Member
Alas, the only ones who might have a clue aren't talking - the GM engineers. Is it unknowable or is it unspeakable.
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Yeah, the guy makes a pretty good case that weak pushrods are the smoking gun. But who knows? The engines with the older AFM system had essentially the same lifters, rockers, pushrods and springs, and their failure mode was lifters failing to fully engage and getting damaged, with the root cause being either a fault in the VLOM or low oil pressure not providing enough energy for the lifters to reliably engage. The valve train geometry is slightly different in the Gen V engines though, so maybe that's enough to make the pushrods the weak link.My dealer has replaced bent push rods with no broken springs or collapsed lifters. This sure sounds like harmonics on the push rods from a piss poor design. Oh and those bent lifters did have wear marks right in the area of the lifter sidewall where the push rod could make contact with it.