When these lifters fail, the internal mechanism that controls whether they can compress allowing the lower half to follow the cam profile, while the upper half compresses and doesn't exert upward pressure on the push rod, fails. It is a spring that breaks, so it really isn't something that starts slowly and then finally let's go, like say a bearing might. Kind of a binary event.When I had lifter failure at 12,995 miles, I had a very slight shudder in the engine when coming down from highway sustained speed. The vehicle almost felt like something spun around the driveshaft. It then operated normally for the next 15-20 min then all hell broke loose as I rolled in to town.
I’m convinced something’s wonky with my engine after the repair. Curious if the lifters are just beginning to fail or if it’s something else.
The failure on these lifters is caused by a broken pin lock spring inside the lifter. When that spring breaks, the lifter is unlocked "permanently" and thus the valve that lifter opens and closes is always closed thus unable to fire (hard miss). A hard miss will generate a check engine light (and usually a bunch of other notices that really have nothing to do with the actual miss). A miss definitely could feel like a shudder, depending on the mode you are in when it starts missing.
When you had your lifter failure, did they replace all 16 lifters, or just one bank (8 lifters)? Also, when you had your failure, did they replace any push rods and/or valve springs?