Guest
I understand that Piston Slap is not new and not isolated to any one manufacturer, but it does seem like it has reached critical mass for GM these days. With the new piston designs and the ring package being pushed almost all the way up to the crown for efficiency purposes, is the the piston to cylinder bore clearance target (tolerance) all that small or is the assmbly line being that sloppy? My guess is a combination of both. I also understand that a little bit of piston slap (cold start knock) isn't necessarily catostrophic but, loads of the new GM products have piston slap that gradually gets worse, reduced compression in one or more cylinders, accelerated oil consumption at very low mileage and apparently increased vehicle emmissions. GM has TSB's out regarding piston slap and oil consumption on their 1999-2002 3.1, 3.4, 4.8, 5.3 and 6.0 liter products. Their new oil consumption TSB says burning 1 quart of oil per 2,000 miles is "NORMAL" as long as the engine has less than 36,000 miles on it.
How much oil can you burn before you start failing tailpipe emissions tests (undertsanding they are not all the same)?
How much oil consumption do the other manufacturers typically consider "NORMAL" on 1999-2002 vehicles?
Why does GM seem to be having a bigger problem with piston slap than the other manufacturers (not that the others aren't having some as well)?
There is a load of upset GM consumers over at
How much oil can you burn before you start failing tailpipe emissions tests (undertsanding they are not all the same)?
How much oil consumption do the other manufacturers typically consider "NORMAL" on 1999-2002 vehicles?
Why does GM seem to be having a bigger problem with piston slap than the other manufacturers (not that the others aren't having some as well)?
There is a load of upset GM consumers over at