Most Common Problems of the 2007-2013 GMC Sierra & Chevy Silverado
I've had a few of these problems over the years, though none of the serious ones.
I've had a few of these problems over the years, though none of the serious ones.
Working on figuring out what I should get at the store before transitioning to a car-free lifestyle on January 1st. I want to try to get any necessary supplies that I can get in bulk and will last like toilet paper, big bags of beans and rice both to save money and reduce packaging, and because such things will be difficult to transport on a bicycle or on the bus. I also got extra bike lube and spare tubes, in case the ones I have at home get a flat that can’t be patched.
I’ve always kind of wanted to try the car-free lifestyle but never had the opportunity. I think this will be a very useful experience on many levels, I will learn a lot and maybe get to know my community better. While I’ve long used the bus to get to work and to a lesser extent around town, and have always walked or ridden around town, I’ve never been without a vehicle for an extended time period. I only usually drove once a week most of winter to go to store and visit family, so it’s not the biggest loss, still sometimes it’s convenient knowing you have a vehicle.
They say being a non-driver saves a lot of money, though I’m not sure it’s as great as they say, as it will only be a few hundred dollars I get back from my car insurance and I normally fuel up maybe once every 4-6 weeks in winter as I drive so little in winter unless I’m taking trips. But I’m actually interested how it changes how I grocery shop and run many other errands. Eat even more dried rice and beans, they’re cheap, healthy, and easy to carry on the bicycle. Probably spend more on bus fares though and on certain things at Hannaford or Price Chopper compared to Walmart. Though that varies. Probably continue to do most of my shopping on weekends, by bicycle.
It will be a clean slate once spring comes, as I’m surrending my plates and canceling my auto insurance. Keeping my drivers license though. But I’ve needed to update my insurance policy for years, I haven’t updated my deducatables in decades, and it’s good to carefully revisit such things, should I decide to take up driving again. I probably will, but I need time think about this all, and it makes zero sense to have an automobile in winter when I drive so little.
There are 12 days left in the year, assuming that I retire Big Red on Wednesday, December 31, 2025. I was listening to Tim McGraw’s song, Live Like You Were Dying as I drove to work today.
He said, “I was in my early 40s with a lot of life before me
When a moment came that stopped me on a dime
I spent most of the next days looking at the X-rays
Talkin’ ’bout the options and talkin’ ’bout sweet times”
I asked him when it sank in
That this might really be the real end
How’s it hit ya when you get that kind of news?
Man, whatcha do?
And he said
“I went skydiving, I went Rocky Mountain climbing
I went two point seven seconds on a bull named Fu Man Chu
And I loved deeper and I spoke sweeter
And I gave forgiveness I’d been denyin'”
And he said, “Some day I hope you get the chance
To live like you were dyin'”
It seems almost unimaginable at one level that I plan to retire Red as the year comes to a close and won’t have a vehicle until April. At one level, I question my decision – I could get the frame fixed on my truck – Goval Welding in Colonie works on these Silverados, maybe a couple hundred of the year welding in replacement mid-frame sections and other parts. The thing is I know it will need at least new mid-frame sections on both sides, which are about $270 each, plus I am pretty sure the the rear shock mount is getting rotted, and once they pull the bed they’ll figure that needs replacing, and I’ve known for years that the trailer hitch is rotted out. Plus there is rot is Center Front Section that my mechanic identified as being needed to repaired.

Two different mechanics I’ve talked to says Goval Welding does excellent work, but to get the frame up to decent conditions we are talking multiple thousands of dollars, between parts and labor which involves pulling the bed, shocks, gas tank (boom?), among other things. The thing is Red is now old, and like everything it has a lifespan. Sometimes it’s best to know when to quit when you’re ahead. Maybe if I was facing a car payment I might have a different thought about it, but I’ve had money specifically earmarked for replacing Red for a few years now, and last year formally too action to close out CD that had previously locked it up.
I thought a lot about this day 14 1/4 years ago. Did I know it would have hard date, December 31, 2025 back in September 2011? No. But it”s been a good ride.
Really very few repairs in grand scheme of things, you can’t count getting rear-ended on expressway or that time the idiot neighbor bumped my then brand new truck with his bro truck. A bad wheel bearing with 35s on a half ton, is to be guaranteed, and I think I might of replaced a shock bushing or two, and maybe a control arm and ball joint years ago now. I don’t even remember at this point it was so long ago.
And I continue to look the options, researching frame repairs, repair kits and procedure, and while I think Goval would do excellent work, I’m not convinced it’s the right option at this point.
And I’m like Googling “can I fit 35s on a stock F-250”? Because I’m extremely mentally ill, and I’ve not made up my mind or bigoted but I do like those big trucks, though my mind says I should be responsible get a Taco truck. But April is a long ways off, and first I’m going to learn how to explore the city on a mountain bike and city bus.
I stumbled upon this ad and was like, can I find a job in Utica or Boonville that doesn’t pay like shit and tolerate a commute to those cities. $175k, where do I send my check today?
But then I reminded myself that Alder Creek is still in State of Shit New York, can’t have burn barrel, have to get government permission to buy ammunition, hand guns and forget having an AR-15 to ventalate said burn barrel. It takes only one liberal to smell a little plastic or hear some gun fire to ruin your life. Go recycle your plastic and attend those Never Trump Rallies, silly man. Dream on, retirement isn’t that far away.
$174,900 / 1br – 392ft2 – Off the Grid Cabin with 25+ Acres, Well & Septic! (Remsen)
“This 25.49-acre lot features a 14′ x 28′ cabin, located just a half mile off State Route 12 in the Town of Remsen. The property includes a well and septic system and is completely off the grid, offering a true escape from everyday life. With 800 feet of road frontage, a spring running through the land, and a beautifully wooded setting, it provides excellent opportunities for deer, turkey, and bear hunting, as well as small game. Situated near snowmobile trails and close to Old Forge and the Forestport area, it makes an ideal recreational getaway. The property is located in the Remsen Central School District, with easy access to Tug Hill, and comes complete with a generator for power.”
The advertiser asks.
Maybe the solution would be to have put more money into a Roth IRA rather then an IRA or a 401(k)/457(b) Roth option so you don’t get into that situation when your old, but alas that has only been a option for a few decades, and you have to pay more taxes up front. People downplay the upfront tax advantages to traditional retirement accounts today, but often in your working years you make more money then you’ll be making in retirement.
But I have questions why you don’t want to take out the money you’ve so carefully saved and invested, and enjoy it in your final years. There is no guarantee for tomorrow. Just pay your goddamn taxes, but maybe I’m jealous as I’m not at that point, but I had an RMD to deal with at that point my life I’d buy more cows and other other livestock, maybe a new tractor or truck. Stop hoarding cash, you ain’t going to last forever.
There are those who want to live forever. But I say it’s more important to live the good life. Not spend it on frivolous shit, but if you can invest it in your operation to make it more sustainable and enjoyable, then all the better. Chances are if you don’t want to end up as a cripple in the old folks home, it’s best to use at least the government minimum of it up now, even if you do have to pay taxes. Nothing is worse then being a cripple in old age, I am very sympathetic to the elderly that blow out their brains when they come to realization that they have little more they can do to contribute to this world and enjoy their life.
Yeah it’s raining out I’m going to drive my big jacked up truck to work for one of the last times. It’s hard to believe those days will be coming to a close in 12 days, when I’ll park it at the parents homestead, take off the plates and surrender them to DMV and cancel my car insurance.
At one level, it seems like hardly worth the effort to cancel my car insurance and return my plates for maybe four months, 🆕 but I want to start anew, with new insurance with properly adjusted deductibles and compare policies. I heard my credit union has some good rates. Any new vehicle is likely to be vastly more expensive to insure, so I don’t just want to transfer over my existing policy. I can invest that $200 or so check I get back from my insurer for the remaining months on my policy. I know it’s a pissy amount of money for the hassle but it seems wasteful to continue to insure a junk vehicle that can’t any longer be driven on the roads legally.
I think it’s fine to drive in, as nothing has changed 🔍 since the inspection even if they did poke loose some of flaking the rust during the inspection. It will survive another 12 days, though I should be easy on the bumps, lest I break the bed from the cab. I guess at this point it doesn’t really matter as I’m going to junk it or sell it at fire sale prices to whatever hillbilly owns a welder and it can be their dream jacked up truck with some bondo. 🛠️ I mean it only has 118k on the odometer, and I did regular oil changes, fluid changes, and transmission change at 50k. And the lifters don’t even complain that much except when it’s really cold and they stop when they warm up. A lot of issues could be fixed with some welding, bondo, and maybe some general TLC I’m not willing to give it.
Of course, as I mock all the 20-year old Honda Civic and Toyota Corolla drivers, 🚘 they point out how they have a half million miles on their blocks and how little fuel they use. ⛽ But then I point they drive their pissy little cars from their suburban homes to everywhere, every day from the Big Box Shopping Mauls and suburban office campuses. They sit for hours and hours each week on the freeway. I still prefer busing and biking it, 🚲 🚌 even if it’s slow, and living the urban life while I still have to work. And once I own that off-grid cabin, sure I’ll drive to town once a week to get farm supplies and other things I can’t grow or produce, 🥕 but it certainly won’t be a daily driver. Just all those traffic lights 🚦 really grind in my mind. Plus the cops waiting in hiding to rape you behind every bush. 👮
I can tell myself I haven’t made up my mind about getting an government-agency spec F-250 regular cab long bed 4x4, probably red, 🛻 but it depends what color is avaliable locally, preferably somewhat used. It just sucks that so many of the 1/2 ton trucks and even mid-size trucks are these tech-laden overpriced Cadillacs that have flimsy engines and look like your driving a computer. The 2020s are the modern 1970s! An era of land yachts with lots of fake luxury and government compliance equipment, that suck. I mean, Trump isn’t wrong about how we’ve enshitified cars in recent years with regulations. I’d much rather have to get out to unlock the hubs then have auto-stop shut-off and displacement on demand.🔘 The DoD lifters on my Chevy 5.3l outlived my jacked up trucks frame with the salty weather, but it wasn’t always apparent that would happen, and other drivers have had much worse luck. It doesn’t help that all the new cars come with blowers and turbo chargers, and engines the size of two plastic soda bottles and use oil as thin and unlubricating as pure water. I am looking at Toyota Tacomas, but their so small and pissy. All of them are now that quad cab, I want I want a regular cab, and getting a Tacoma with a manual stick shift is like getting a unicorn. I am afraid I’d burn out the alternator with my electric loads, and where to stick all those batteries and can I get more then one 100 watt panel on the roof? Plus, I have so much camping gear these days. But the fuel economy is so good. ⛽ But I don’t plan on buying a daily driver, I’m okay with living in city until I can retire to that off-grid homestead.
I don’t fucking know, but honestly. 🤷♂️ I just need to make sure I have my pantry well stocked before it’s those days after I’ve surrendered my plates to DMV and canceled my car insurance. I can bike a lot of places, but it’s not going to be as convinent as going to Wally World and leaving with $100 worth of groceries including big bags of rice and beans. It’s good knowing I have options, and I don’t have a car payment, just one big check to cut, 💵 but it’s money I won’t have going forward once it’s spent. But then I look at the Capital Gains over the past few years, and I’m like does it really matter? I know, it’s money I could spend on cattle and manure spreaders, solar panels and burn barrels. I think I spent around $40-45k for Big Red between the truck, cap, lift kit, and everything else, though money was worth a lot more back in the day. How fast those days come and go. Still it’s going to be different not owning a vehicle for a while, though it will be fun riding my mountain bike and climbing in and out of big ol’ pickup trucks after not driving for a few months. Honestly, if I spend an extra $10k or so to get the truck I really want, spread out over 15 years it’s far less then most people piss away at restaurants, cable television and home internet, 📺 or for that matter on all the plastic crap they buy at Amazon and then pay to get hauled off because they don’t burn it or drive it themselves to the transfer station. Don’t you know, you can afford trash pickup with free plastic recyclings, cable television and to heat your apartment at 72 degrees rather then 48 degrees? Or even buy a plastic house! 🏡 But alas I know the burn barrel smell too well. Plastic is bad news even if it does burn hot.
I’ve not been sleeping well as you can see, 💤 and all those ads for financial managers, SUVs and plastic houses, really grind my gears, ⚙️ along with ads for electric cars, solar panels, and all that sustainability crap. I get most people with Red regular cab F-250s have a George Bush or these days a Trump bumper sticker, and probably don’t ride city bus or their mountain bike to work. And I keep think about frugality, 💰 what is the responsible thing to do, but the advertisers keep pushing more plastic houses with solar panels and SUVs down my throat. 💭 At least I know my sanity isn’t that bad learning that all the wallowing I’ve been feeling in my truck wasn’t in my head, it was the rotted out frame, even if the colors and shouting people in the ads still confuse my brain, though limiting my Facebook and watching YouTube videos in Brave Tube have helped restore a bit of my – See What You Need is BETTER HELP! Oh gawd, let me listen to the rest of this Ian Tyson song, an then shower 🚿 and drive my big jacked up truck to work one of the last times.