Which Motor Mounts

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.

DragonSlayer1

TYF Newbie
Joined
Jun 13, 2023
Posts
5
Reaction score
4
Hi All: Which motor mounts would you suggest for 2008 AWD GMC Yukon 6.2L. From what I'm hearing the stock ones are not being suggested.

Thanks
 

Joseph Garcia

Supporting Member
Joined
Aug 2, 2018
Posts
7,366
Reaction score
9,971
Welcome to the Forum from NH.

Lots of knowledgeable folks here who freely share their knowledge, experiences, and perspectives. Knowledge is power.

I hope that you will become a participating member in the Forum's discussions.

Pics of the truck, please.

It is my understanding that the OEM motor mounts for your truck have a fluid-filled shock absorber built into them to reduce engine vibration in the interior, but in time, that shock absorber ruptures. I believe that some folks replace the OEM motor mounts with Hummer H3 motor mounts.

Other folks will chime in.
 

swathdiver

Full Access Member
Joined
May 18, 2017
Posts
19,638
Reaction score
26,397
Location
Treasure Coast, Florida
Hi All: Which motor mounts would you suggest for 2008 AWD GMC Yukon 6.2L. From what I'm hearing the stock ones are not being suggested.

Thanks
If you don't want any engine vibrations and don't dog the motor all the time, the factory fluid filled mounts are fine. But if you want something more durable and don't mind a little engine vibration at idle, the H3 mount that Don posted is the way to go. I run them both on mine. The Yukon gets the stock mounts and the 6.2s get the Hummer mounts!
 
OP
OP
D

DragonSlayer1

TYF Newbie
Joined
Jun 13, 2023
Posts
5
Reaction score
4
Thank you for the info. A large majority of the use of this Yukon 6.2 will be pulling a 28 enclosed snowmobile trailer amongst other family outings and trips. So not my daily driver. I'm looking to try and make some improvements for engine life longevity and overall performance. Having said that I will probably go with the H3 mounts. If you have any other suggestions for must have's on these rigs I'm all ears. I have notice lower oil pressure after driving for an hour or so, but it is not consistently low - which is an issue I've read about.

Thanks
 
Last edited:

swathdiver

Full Access Member
Joined
May 18, 2017
Posts
19,638
Reaction score
26,397
Location
Treasure Coast, Florida
Thank you for the info. A large majority of the use of this Yukon 6.2 will be pulling a 28 enclosed snowmobile trailer amongst other family outings and trips. So not my daily driver. I'm looking to try and make some improvements for engine life longevity and overall performance. Having said that I will probably go with the H3 mounts. If you have any other suggestions for must have's on these rigs I'm all ears. I have notice lower oil pressure after driving for an hour or so, but it is not consistently low - which is an issue I've read about.

Thanks
Once the oil is warmed up, the pressure on the gauge will usually be just shy of 40 psi, the bypass spring on the pump is 33 psi as our oil pumps deliver 1/3 more oil per rev than an iron block motor's pump to compensate for the increased tolerances in our aluminum engines.

How many miles? 6.2s have a tendency to break the #8 or #7 valve springs at around 165K miles. We see this more often with the oldest 6.2s, the 2007-2008 L92s but have seen it on the newer ones. If the motor gets hot, like a coolant leak, they have a tendency to drop a valve when the bronze guide fell out of place. There's a guy on here right now who probably has that issue. Having said that, not everybody experiences these things.

Run the truck on the severe service schedule except for the transmission. Change the fluid if all she does is tow to maybe every 10K miles or so. You can send out samples to Blackstone-Labs for analysis.

You can also beef up the valve body in the transmission and consider putting in a more stout torque converter. Not a higher stall, just stronger and improved parts. The weak link in our drivetrain is not the transmission but the torque converter.

You can check out Seth's upgrades to his Cadillac's transmission here:

 
OP
OP
D

DragonSlayer1

TYF Newbie
Joined
Jun 13, 2023
Posts
5
Reaction score
4
Hum. So would you suggest just replacing all of the valve springs to prevent a failure?
 

Forum statistics

Threads
132,422
Posts
1,867,805
Members
97,094
Latest member
Breezy613

Latest posts

Top