1989 Chevrolet 1500 Truck 5.7 V8 White Long Wheel Base on 2040-cars
Milan, Tennessee, United States
You are bidding on a used 1989 Chevrolet 1500 Silverado Long Wheel Base truck. It is white with blue interior. The paint is in good condition. The interior is fair, with some fading due to the sun. The engine runs fine but the oil pressure gauge goes up and down. Transmission has 20,000 miles on it, and was rebuilt locally by Suttons, a reputable transmission business. The air condition works, but you have to put a can of freon in it at the start of the season. It leaks out at the valve. Heater works fine. Brakes are fine. Front tires have little life left, but rears are fine. Power windows and locks work 98% of the time, the other times you have to bump the switch with your hand to wake it up. Has a crack in the windshield. I have priced this truck to reflect its age and high miles, but at the same time it has been a good truck for me and I expect it will for you as well.
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Auto Services in Tennessee
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Auto blog
'Killing a Duramax' Gale Banks YouTube series methodically tunes a diesel to death
Thu, Feb 27 2020Learning or perfecting a skill by watching YouTube videos is known as attending YouTube University. GM Authority picked up on one of the video site's more fascinating courses, hosted by Gale Banks; in a fair world, he should be referred to as Professor Banks when it comes to diesel engines and truck tuning. A few months after GM introduced the updated L5P 6.6-liter Duramax diesel V8 in the 2020 Chevrolet Silverado HD and GMC Sierra HD that ships with 454 horsepower and 910 pound-feet of torque, Banks decided he wanted to methodically tune the engine to death. The purpose of the resulting series, called "Killing a Duramax," is to push more power out of the engine in order to discover which parts break and when — or, as Banks puts it, force-feed the Duramax "until the crank hits the street and the heads hit the hood." With that knowledge, Banks can figure out all the weak points on his way to building what he calls a "Superturbo," that being a supercharged, twin-turbo race engine with more than 1,000 hp. What makes the series fascinating is Banks' knowledge, paired with the company's comprehensive iDash engine monitoring system that keeps tabs on a glut of parameters every step of the way. So for instance, you get Banks explaining the differences between inches of mercury and barometric pressure, how those are different from the water content of the air measured in grains, then showing those readouts on the iDash, then explaining in detail how they affect the air density in the Duramax system. The stock Borg-Warner variable turbo gets a lot of airtime — Banks accuses it of being "out to lunch" because he feels it's the weakest link on the engine. That turns into a turbo teardown and a deep explanation of performance pitfalls, such as when air pressure on the turbine begins to diverge from the boost pressure coming from the compressor. Banks says he can keep close tabs on where power's coming from, because the iDash monitors the horsepower contribution provided by the ambient air, the turbo, and the intercooler separately. The major changes so far are a stouter Precision 7675 turbo and TurboSmart wastegate (episode 5), a twin intake (episode 6), a custom liquid-cooled intercooler from a marine engine, a new GM oil cooler and synthetic oil (episode 10), and new injectors (episode 11).
GM applies for LT5, LTX trademarks... are new small block variants coming?
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The LTX trademark is, as with that last letter, a complete mystery. If the "X" isn't a generic way to denote the whole LT family, it's wondered if it LTX could refer to a crate motor offering like the LSX.
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