You guys are usually not quick to resort to throwing parts at the problem so I’m sure there’s a good a reason for it but it hasn’t been explained to me yet.
I hope you can understand my caution to throwing my wallet at the problem without a little investigation, I would be surprised if there is literally no other reason cruise control would disengage other than a faulty brake pedal switch but that hasn’t been explained.
The first time my cruise control disengaged was accompanied by a check engine light so I know there are other parameters that can have influence on cruise control operation.
Also stated in my initial post the brake pedal switch was replaced when I bought my Tahoe 4 years ago
It's such a commonly failing part that, with no other symptoms pointing elsewhere, it's worth throwing the $16 and 10 minutes at. You're correct that there are other causes for the cruise to disengage and/or not set. As they said, it is automatically disabled when there's a drivabilty and/or safety (Traction Control, StabiliTrak, etc.) concern. Look at it from the other way: What if you went on a deep dive checking circuits, troubleshooting modules, sensors and switches and still drew a blank? THEN you replaced the switch and the issue never happened again? You'd be aggravated that you wasted a whole weekend crawling through your Tahoe when all you needed was 10 minutes to lay in the floorboard.
It's not a critical system and you could wait until it does it more frequently if you wanna get every cent out of the current switch. Speaking of, is it an OEM switch or aftermarket? If it starts happening more often, try those tests I listed to help confirm.