Yet another Yukon with engine tick and low oil pressure

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.

BlaineBug

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 29, 2019
Posts
1,179
Reaction score
668
Location
Clown World
Hi. First post here. I’ve been searching and reading multiple threads about the issue, but thought I’d share the symptoms my Yukon is having.

Bought a 2008 GMC Yukon XL with the 6.2 engine with 111.000 miles on it. After a couple of weeks I got the ticking noise at start up and the oil pressure drops after a short drive.

Ticking is worst at cold start, after 10 min it will be less significant. However oil pressure starts at 40 psi (according to gauge) and after a short drive it will drop to 10-15 psi at idle.

Took it to the mechanic and he had it for a couple of days. Oil and filter was changed. He tried the different ‘miracle oils’ and the ticking became less pronounced, but still there. He gave me the bad news and said that I would need a new engine. Apparently the vehicle has been run on a LPG system at some point in time, which was not good for the engine. I trust the guy, so the search for a replacement engine is in progress (need it shipped to Europe so it might take some time though)

I’ve added videos of what the ticking sounds like and what the oil pressure is.

Hopefully when a replacement engine has been found and installed I can update with a success story.

Start


After a short drive


Have the following DTC (the check engine light is on)

P0420 catalyst syst

P1133 HO2S insufficient switching

P2270 O2 sensor signal stuck
Your engine probably has a collapsed AFM lifter. There is no way that this metallic "tap tap tappity tap" is an exhaust manifold leak. The low oil pressure is probably the O-ring on the pickup tube.
 
OP
OP
YukonDK

YukonDK

Member
Joined
Aug 31, 2023
Posts
46
Reaction score
41
Your engine probably has a collapsed AFM lifter. There is no way that this metallic "tap tap tappity tap" is an exhaust manifold leak. The low oil pressure is probably the O-ring on the pickup tube.

Thank you for your input, appreciate it.

I decided to have a mechanic look at it, so I dropped it off on Wednesday and I’m currently waiting to hear what their diagnosis/conclusion is. It made sense to have them go over it, since I needed the windshield changed (even though it was changed just before I got the Yukon, final thing the dealer did). Got a stone chip which almost instantly became a cracked windshield on my way home from work.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_7837.jpeg
    IMG_7837.jpeg
    336.9 KB · Views: 4
OP
OP
YukonDK

YukonDK

Member
Joined
Aug 31, 2023
Posts
46
Reaction score
41
An update.

Got a call from the mechanic today and the tapping/knocking/ticking noise is most likely a lifter. However given that it goes away after engine gets warm he doesn’t recommend changing the lifters yet. He will try to give it some ‘treatments’ and see if that helps. He will also be changing the oil and filter to something which solved the issue for another Yukon.

The oil pressure is acceptable at idle when warm, according the device he measured it with (not just reading the gauge), it was 1.4 bar (I think that’s equivalent to approximately 20 psi). As there is no noises from the engine when warm and oil pressure increases with rpm, he said it was not something to be concerned about at the moment.

Conclusion was that I should just drive the Yukon for now.

However one of my o2 sensors was bad so all 4 will be changed.

I hope to get it back next week and if the story develops I’ll update again.

Thank you to everyone for the input I received, it’s appreciated.
 
Last edited:

BlaineBug

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 29, 2019
Posts
1,179
Reaction score
668
Location
Clown World
An update.

Got a call from the mechanic today and the tapping/knocking/ticking noise is most likely a lifter. However given that it goes away after engine gets warm he doesn’t recommend changing the lifters yet. He will try to give it some ‘treatments’ and see if that helps. He will also be changing the oil and filter to something which solved the issue for another Yukon.

The oil pressure is acceptable at idle when warm, according the device he measured it with (not just reading the gauge), it was 1.4 bar (I think that’s equivalent to approximately 20 psi). As there is no noises from the engine when warm and oil pressure increases with rpm, he said it was not something to be concerned about at the moment.

Conclusion was that I should just drive the Yukon for now.

However one of my o2 sensors was bad so all 4 will be changed.

I hope to get it back next week and if the story develops I’ll update again.

Thank you to everyone for the input I received, it’s appreciated.
If you decide, dropping the oil pan and replacing that oil pump O-ring is relatively non-invasive, in comparison to replacing a lifter(s).
 
OP
OP
YukonDK

YukonDK

Member
Joined
Aug 31, 2023
Posts
46
Reaction score
41
If you decide, dropping the oil pan and replacing that oil pump O-ring is relatively non-invasive, in comparison to replacing a lifter(s).
I’ve watched some YouTube videos about this and unfortunately that’s above my skill level. I’ll need a shop to do that.
 

BlaineBug

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 29, 2019
Posts
1,179
Reaction score
668
Location
Clown World
I’ve watched some YouTube videos about this and unfortunately that’s above my skill level. I’ll need a shop to do that.
Understandable. I'd hope their labor wouldn't be TOO outrageous. I'm not sure how many hours it would take to accomplish.
 
OP
OP
YukonDK

YukonDK

Member
Joined
Aug 31, 2023
Posts
46
Reaction score
41
Understandable. I'd hope their labor wouldn't be TOO outrageous. I'm not sure how many hours it would take to accomplish.
I’m hoping that it won’t be too expensive. I’ve decided that I’ll call them tomorrow and ask them to change the o ring, now that they already have the vehicle and will be changing the oil and filter along with the o2 sensors. Hopefully it can be done in a day or two and it’s worth a try to see if that helps improve oil pressure when engine is warm.
 

BlaineBug

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 29, 2019
Posts
1,179
Reaction score
668
Location
Clown World
I’m hoping that it won’t be too expensive. I’ve decided that I’ll call them tomorrow and ask them to change the o ring, now that they already have the vehicle and will be changing the oil and filter along with the o2 sensors. Hopefully it can be done in a day or two and it’s worth a try to see if that helps improve oil pressure when engine is warm.
If you can improve your oil pressure I'd be interested to learn if there is any change with your lifter noises.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
132,728
Posts
1,873,274
Members
97,558
Latest member
BurbyRST

Latest posts

Top