Well, I'm officially a member of the Duramax Suburban club!
My brother and I put this together last Christmas, and I ended up buying it from him over Thanksgiving.
It is a 2003 Chevrolet Suburban K2500 LT Quadrasteer, fairly loaded. Heated seats, power adjust pedals, etc. It was an Oregon vehicle, so federal emissions! And that means, oh yes, a federal LB7 got dropped in! 0 emissions controls, 100% legal!
For now it has the truck transfer case (NVG 263 XHD), but I have the stock NVG 246 still. I plan to hybrid them together to get the stronger chain along with the auto mode. Basically I want to do [THREAD=71842]what chrisuns did[/THREAD], but I might end up paying my local transmission shop to do it (my brother is the mechanical whiz, I'm the electrical/computer guy).
Speaking of the transmission shop, I had a mild build done, since it will only ever run [THREAD=42711]NoLogic 3.0[/THREAD] (425 RWHP / 748 lb-ft). If I recall, it was GPZ clutches, the normal valve body mods, and a modified LML converter. They figured a single disc LML with a billet lid and some tweaks could hold the mild torque I'm making, and so far, so good! Dirt cheap converter this way. Oh, and how could I forget: they did the Suncoast 6-Speed conversion too!
The fuel system is a bit of an experiment. It has an AirDog II-4G DF-165 lift pump on the passenger side (all custom bent hard line by yours truly!), and since I was modifying the harness anyway, it is run from a relay in the stock fuse block with its own fuse. Wiring looks 100% factory. We decided we didn't need the return fuel cooler since it won't tow heavy. Watching fuel temps seems to back up that theory, even with the tanks almost empty, it never goes over 80°C on hills, and it usually stays closer to 50°C. That's not much different from my truck, which has the cooler.
Most people modify the fuel filler to prevent slosh between the tanks, and/or just run a line between the tanks so they drain into each other. I decided that was a hardware solution to a software problem, so we left the weird stock filler hose/diverter setup alone. I swapped a dual-tank segment in to the OS, and after playing with the tank level tables, got everything working perfectly! Even using the stock gasoline transfer pump in the rear tank.
Well, until last month, when it got a BUNCH of water (not sure from where?!) in the tanks, and it burned out the transfer pump. It even pushed water through the AirDog filters and started filling up the factory separator! Got all the water I could out (we pulled over a gallon of water ) and swapped to a single tank tune for a bit until I can drop the rear tank and put a new transfer pump in. Made me really glad I didn't bypass the stock filter, and really makes me question the AirDog water separator. I run a Baldwin on my truck, probably should put one on here too.
Anyway, it runs and drives like a dream! It turns ridiculously tight, it is almost unbelievable coming from my CCSB truck. Heck, it turns tighter than my Pontiac. I'm going to keep this one almost stock (still have my truck to play with), but there are a few more tweaks I will do over the next few years. I'll keep this thread updated with any developments.
My brother and I put this together last Christmas, and I ended up buying it from him over Thanksgiving.
It is a 2003 Chevrolet Suburban K2500 LT Quadrasteer, fairly loaded. Heated seats, power adjust pedals, etc. It was an Oregon vehicle, so federal emissions! And that means, oh yes, a federal LB7 got dropped in! 0 emissions controls, 100% legal!
For now it has the truck transfer case (NVG 263 XHD), but I have the stock NVG 246 still. I plan to hybrid them together to get the stronger chain along with the auto mode. Basically I want to do [THREAD=71842]what chrisuns did[/THREAD], but I might end up paying my local transmission shop to do it (my brother is the mechanical whiz, I'm the electrical/computer guy).
Speaking of the transmission shop, I had a mild build done, since it will only ever run [THREAD=42711]NoLogic 3.0[/THREAD] (425 RWHP / 748 lb-ft). If I recall, it was GPZ clutches, the normal valve body mods, and a modified LML converter. They figured a single disc LML with a billet lid and some tweaks could hold the mild torque I'm making, and so far, so good! Dirt cheap converter this way. Oh, and how could I forget: they did the Suncoast 6-Speed conversion too!
The fuel system is a bit of an experiment. It has an AirDog II-4G DF-165 lift pump on the passenger side (all custom bent hard line by yours truly!), and since I was modifying the harness anyway, it is run from a relay in the stock fuse block with its own fuse. Wiring looks 100% factory. We decided we didn't need the return fuel cooler since it won't tow heavy. Watching fuel temps seems to back up that theory, even with the tanks almost empty, it never goes over 80°C on hills, and it usually stays closer to 50°C. That's not much different from my truck, which has the cooler.
Most people modify the fuel filler to prevent slosh between the tanks, and/or just run a line between the tanks so they drain into each other. I decided that was a hardware solution to a software problem, so we left the weird stock filler hose/diverter setup alone. I swapped a dual-tank segment in to the OS, and after playing with the tank level tables, got everything working perfectly! Even using the stock gasoline transfer pump in the rear tank.
Well, until last month, when it got a BUNCH of water (not sure from where?!) in the tanks, and it burned out the transfer pump. It even pushed water through the AirDog filters and started filling up the factory separator! Got all the water I could out (we pulled over a gallon of water ) and swapped to a single tank tune for a bit until I can drop the rear tank and put a new transfer pump in. Made me really glad I didn't bypass the stock filter, and really makes me question the AirDog water separator. I run a Baldwin on my truck, probably should put one on here too.
Anyway, it runs and drives like a dream! It turns ridiculously tight, it is almost unbelievable coming from my CCSB truck. Heck, it turns tighter than my Pontiac. I'm going to keep this one almost stock (still have my truck to play with), but there are a few more tweaks I will do over the next few years. I'll keep this thread updated with any developments.