Reddog
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Mike
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2023
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 278
- Reaction score
- 386
- Location
- Alexandria, Virginia
- Vehicle(s)
- 2023 Jeep Gladiator Rubicon
- Occupation
- Retired Army. Retired Construction Manager / Contracting Officer
Being a GM man all my life it makes me sick that they can’t even put out a tried and tested engine anymore without screwing up and then screwing their customers. Get that woman out of the head office and get rid of the union and start making good products again. What are they doing, copying China?Why are people comparing two very very different engines?
They aren't even close other than they both burn gasoline and make things go.
Here's what insiders are saying - The problem has to do with connecting rod and crankshaft components with unspecified manufacturing defects.
It doesn't cover 2025 model year.
“A series of crankshaft and connecting rod manufacturing improvements implemented on or before June 1st, 2024, addressed contamination and quality issues. Model-year 2025 vehicles were built after these improvements and are not included in the recall.”
You likely know that the numbers, W and other, overlap a lot in measured viscosity so you really haven't ventured out of the yard very far.
Where's the popcorn and where's that chairman?
Is this a "here we go again thing?
What GM is doing is tossing a BAND AID at the problem with the change in oil viscosity. It's so funny - gee, we have defective parts, we'll put some tape over it for you with heavier oil.
And this will lead people to believe - gee, I should run heavier oil, too! GM is fixing their problem with it.
No, they are making customers shut up and go away - they are still running defective engines!
What a hoot.
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