So for about a week now I have been hearing a strange "whistling" or "whining" sound coming from what I believe to be either the engine compartment or wheel area. It seems to come on around 20-30 mph and goes away around 40-45 mph.
I took my LT to my nearest friendly neighborhood Chevrolet dealer and explained the odd (and new) sound. I purchased the truck used at 19,000 mi and never heard it before. An hour or so later I get a call from the dealer advising that they did in fact hear the sound I described during a road test. They put my truck on a lift and ran it, and didn't hear the sound anymore. Their diagnoses, tire noise.... I don't believe this is correct. I have heard tire noise before (not on this vehicle per se') and it sounds more like a rubber friction noise. Mine is definitely more or whine.
While at the dealer, he said they also found a "frozen" caliper pin. By frozen I took this to mean seized and not frozen frozen, as in Northeast Ohio winter frozen. It is 20 degrees out now btw.
Anyway, he said the truck needed new brake pads and rotors at the front end. I wish I would have asked if this premature replacement was caused by the seized caliper pin, but in my anger of hearing $290 plus tax for the job (at 28,000 mi) I just told him to fix it.
I picked the truck up a couple hours later and the noise is still there.
Any Tahoe experts out there please feel free to chime in. My unexplained (or misdiagnosed noise) rotor issue, etc. Thank you
I took my LT to my nearest friendly neighborhood Chevrolet dealer and explained the odd (and new) sound. I purchased the truck used at 19,000 mi and never heard it before. An hour or so later I get a call from the dealer advising that they did in fact hear the sound I described during a road test. They put my truck on a lift and ran it, and didn't hear the sound anymore. Their diagnoses, tire noise.... I don't believe this is correct. I have heard tire noise before (not on this vehicle per se') and it sounds more like a rubber friction noise. Mine is definitely more or whine.
While at the dealer, he said they also found a "frozen" caliper pin. By frozen I took this to mean seized and not frozen frozen, as in Northeast Ohio winter frozen. It is 20 degrees out now btw.
Anyway, he said the truck needed new brake pads and rotors at the front end. I wish I would have asked if this premature replacement was caused by the seized caliper pin, but in my anger of hearing $290 plus tax for the job (at 28,000 mi) I just told him to fix it.
I picked the truck up a couple hours later and the noise is still there.
Any Tahoe experts out there please feel free to chime in. My unexplained (or misdiagnosed noise) rotor issue, etc. Thank you
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