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August 29th, 2016, 10:40 AM
#1
08 Chev Silerado Leaf Springs
This is the third leaf spring I've had to change out on my Chev in 2 years. GM sent out a notice about the problem but only guaranteed them for a certain amount of time. Of course, I missed out by 2 weeks on the first spring being replaced for free.
The worst of it is, like most people I seldom have any weight in the back of the thing. Sometimes just my ATV which weighs under 400 lbs.
I've been driving 4x4's on the job since late '60's and have never replaced a single leaf spring.
Any of you folks having the same issues with your trucks?
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August 29th, 2016 10:40 AM
# ADS
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August 29th, 2016, 11:23 AM
#2
My old beater is a 2001 F-150 (no comments from the peanut gallery please) and although none of the leafs are broken, they're pretty well un-sprung? (is that a term?) Very weak and the truck will squat with little weight in the box. I should get them re-arched I suppose.
I`m guessing the steel used these days is of a lessor quality.
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August 29th, 2016, 11:44 AM
#3

Originally Posted by
Bushmoose
My old beater is a 2001 F-150 (no comments from the peanut gallery please) and although none of the leafs are broken, they're pretty well un-sprung? (is that a term?) Very weak and the truck will squat with little weight in the box. I should get them re-arched I suppose.
I`m guessing the steel used these days is of a lessor quality.
Re-arching does very little, I have a Jeep, the thing used to have almost a reverse arch.
Swapping leaves is not that hard of a job, if your truck does not have helper leaves you can add them on a new stack to take the extra weight when you really load it down.
Leaf springs should never break, they can sag over time but breaking one takes a lot of work, that is why they are still used on the rear end of trucks, they are solid.
Just goes to show how poorly things are made, we have a Dodge truck, a Dakota, it seems like we get recall notices weekly on the thing and we barely drive it, everything breaks, good thing it was almost free.
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August 29th, 2016, 01:26 PM
#4
My brother took his 2010 in last month for that. He also got his GM notice a few weeks late. Sounds like a sleezy way for GM to deal with an ongoing historical problem. Like REDESIGN the darn thing so it stops happening.. He went to a GM dealer in Hamilton and they wanted $1800 to replace a couple springs. He ended up going to a spring repair shop (the ones the dealers use) and had it done for $175. When he drove away he couldn't believe how quite his truck was. Springs must have been broken for years.
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August 29th, 2016, 02:10 PM
#5
I've replaced 3 on my 2009 Sierra.
One actually broke and a 1 foot piece fell out. Luckily it was on a back road.
The guy who owns the spring shop says he has steady business from leaf springs on pick ups.
He said half the problem is manufactured in and the other half is the roads are so crappy these days.
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August 29th, 2016, 02:18 PM
#6
I had a spring break in my 98 ranger from over loading. I took it into a spring shop in Peterborough and got the broken one fixed and got them to add an extra one on both sides. Worth every penny. It lifted my bumper up close to a foot so I adjusted the front end to even it out a little.
My '12 f150 I had them put heavier springs in it from the factory and it handles a load awesome. It is a little rougher without a load in it , but smooth as butter with 1000 pounds in it .
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August 29th, 2016, 02:27 PM
#7
I have an older Jeep Cherokee - the leaf springs were fairly worn out when I got it, and I wanted to lift it anyway, so I bought some aftermarket leaf springs. They have held-up pretty well in the 7 years I have had the vehicle. Maybe look for some better quality aftermarket springs?
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August 29th, 2016, 02:55 PM
#8
I have had a broken spring twice, once on a 2000 and once on a 2007 , both Silverados . The time on the 2007 the broken part swung around and wedged against the tire, cutting it and spinning me crossways on an iced packed road. I have also received a recall on my 2013 for the same problem.
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August 29th, 2016, 03:34 PM
#9
A 2013 and they still haven't fixed the problem in all those years? I guess GM is trying to save a few pounds of weight and a few dollars at the expense of their reputation.
I'm paying around $200 plus tax each time I have to have that middle spring replaced. The guy says Chev springs are 2 1/2 inches wide while Fords are 3 inches so he sees a lot fewer Fords in his shop.
I remember when I was younger we all bought Dodges because there was a dealership in town. The first thing we'd do is add one leaf to the rear suspension because their springs were so soft and it wasn't long before the main leaf would flatten right out.
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August 29th, 2016, 05:58 PM
#10
MY neighbour had 2 go on his 2000 chev truck.........low mileage vehicle
It isn,t how you do it,its how you did it