'99 Suburban K1500, 185,000 miles.
Been noticing just in the last month or so the transmission wants to kick down at the slightest throttle input. Also, going up hills, it seems to drop down sooner and go up slower than it did just a couple months ago. Used to be I could run up Spring Mountain pass and hold 60-65 the whole way and not even kick down. I came back from Vegas today in 2nd gear (because that's all it would do) and barely holding 35mph. I was legit worried it wasn't going to make it either. It felt like it would slip, then grab, then slip, then grab. Did that the whole way up. I was really kicking myself for not taking the long way up through Indian Springs.
On flat ground, it seems to run OK, although it seems to hang in the low gear a long time before the up-shift. And like I said, it will drop down into passing gear in a stiff head wind. It also seems to be worse with temperature. I have noticed the symptoms are more pronounced since it got hot this summer, but correlation does not equal causation. However, I have noticed the symptoms are less pronounced when I first jump in the truck than after it's been running for a couple hours.
I have checked fluid level and that's fine. Any sure fire way to tell if the tranny is about to give up the ghost?
Been noticing just in the last month or so the transmission wants to kick down at the slightest throttle input. Also, going up hills, it seems to drop down sooner and go up slower than it did just a couple months ago. Used to be I could run up Spring Mountain pass and hold 60-65 the whole way and not even kick down. I came back from Vegas today in 2nd gear (because that's all it would do) and barely holding 35mph. I was legit worried it wasn't going to make it either. It felt like it would slip, then grab, then slip, then grab. Did that the whole way up. I was really kicking myself for not taking the long way up through Indian Springs.
On flat ground, it seems to run OK, although it seems to hang in the low gear a long time before the up-shift. And like I said, it will drop down into passing gear in a stiff head wind. It also seems to be worse with temperature. I have noticed the symptoms are more pronounced since it got hot this summer, but correlation does not equal causation. However, I have noticed the symptoms are less pronounced when I first jump in the truck than after it's been running for a couple hours.
I have checked fluid level and that's fine. Any sure fire way to tell if the tranny is about to give up the ghost?