Lancem
Member
I don't see anything I couldn't do in the driveway my only thought on the whole thing is why change just one shock in the front? If one is bad the other can't be far behind, I would change them both.
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Those are some insane labor rates. The ball joints are just ball joints, no control arms in the quote. Once the truck was up on the lift any decent mechanic could remove and replace those ball joints while simultaneously flipping the pages of his ******* and finish the whole job in 30 - 45 minutes flat. I just replaced the control arms with ball joints , stabilizer links, tie rods, struts, pads and rotors all at once on my Cadillac DTS. Definitely different vehicle, but I can tell you any garage mechanic can do it. However I will predicate it on this, its a fair amount of work you are proposing. It took me 3 weekends to do all the work I mentioned, because a. I am not inclined to do it all at once, and b. I didn't need the vehicle. I worked 2 - 4 hours each day, total of 4 days out of the 3 weeks.
My advice: 1. You need to know what you are doing when you start out with regards to safety. You need torque wrenches and torque tables. You need more than simple wrenches to do this type of work. It takes planning to have everything ready. You need ramps, jack stands, jacks, etc. You need the parts, and all the tools, you need the time and a place to do it. Finally , although the people on forums like this will tell you its simple, it because they are experienced. If you are experienced you will still have a challenge ahead of you , but of course its doable.
If it were me I would not want to tackle it this time of year, cause I like relaxing during the holidays, but if I was 20 I would eat it up!
I don't see anything I couldn't do in the driveway my only thought on the whole thing is why change just one shock in the front? If one is bad the other can't be far behind, I would change them both.
DEFINITELY do the shocks and joints yourself. Super easy, but one caveat is to rent to the tool from Oreillys or whatever. Shocker as it may seem, the ball joint press from harbor freight isn't strong enough for these beasts.
That said, if your control arms are all rusted out, then definitely replace them in one component as suggested earlier.
My other concern is that if you're going so far as to drop the oil pan and replace the gaskets......you might as well just replace the damn pump. If you dont have record of it being done, you might as well do it. They have a tendency to have a sticky ball/check valve, and apparently that will toast the engine. If you're dropping the pan, you'll have access to the oil pickup tube. You can get the replacement pump and pickup tube as a set at rockauto. Seems reasonable to do both because you're existing pickup tube might be crudded up.
As for shocks, go billstein. 33 bucks a pop. (not sure on the tahoe though, probably a different part number but I'm sure a similar price)
Great to know. This is the type of advice I really appreciate as it saves me from doing it all again in another year potentially.
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Once the truck was up on the lift any decent mechanic could remove and replace those ball joints while simultaneously flipping the pages of his ******* and finish the whole job in 30 - 45 minutes flat.
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