Goldie Hawn - '05 Silverado 1500 Z71

  • HTML tutorial

K-G

Rank V
Member

Enthusiast III

1,845
New Hope, Alabama, United States
First Name
Kajetan
Last Name
Groicher
Member #

23410

Well, it may be about time that I start to document the work I'm doing on my rig. To be honest, I should have started this a log time ago, as Goldie's been with me a while and has needed some care. Here we are on the Bonneville Salt Flats a few years back.
IMG_1789.jpeg

She's not exactly stock, but not heavily modded either. Biggest "upgrade" might be the mild suspension lift (RC 2.5"). Recently, I've done some cam work, which will be the topic of my fist main post.

I'm running 285/75 17 KO2s on 3.42 with a limited slip (factory) rear end.

Engine is 5.3L LM7, and that's received the bulk of the work, as you'll see in a bit.

With luck, what I share may save some of you the pain of learning the hard way. I'm sure y'all will also point out some of the areas I could have avoided hard lessons learned as well.

KG
 
  • Like
Reactions: Neon Paradise

K-G

Rank V
Member

Enthusiast III

1,845
New Hope, Alabama, United States
First Name
Kajetan
Last Name
Groicher
Member #

23410

Goldie Hawn's "Cam Job"
IMG_5385.jpeg
So, here is how this started.

Back in March I noticed a coolant issue, slow leak. I found that odd as all of my cooling components were new (hoses, radiator, pump, etc, etc). I eventually found a very, very small hole right at the water pump neck (up high). I replaced the hose and thought my problem to be solved. Then the tell-tale white smoke at start up...and the leak got faster.

I have the 706 heads, which if Castech, have a known issue with cracking. Yes, I should have looked earlier, but at 200K miles I figured I was probably safe. Removing the heads and rockers reveled the tell-tale Castech casting mark of death, and the water in my oil pan confirmed the worst. So new heads were ordered. Nothing fancy, just re-mans. Frustratingly, though ordered together, one came in as a 706, the other a 803. The research I did told me that they are compatible and can run on the same block, even mixed. So on they went. Mind you I hadn't been that deep in an engine since high school but I figured a small block Chevy can't be that different from a Gen3 LS - and they really aren't for the work I had to do.

New heads went on, but not without me thinking I should probably do my lifters and rods while here, but didn't. Six months later, a persistent valve-train tic told me I should just do what should have been done in March and take care of the entire valve train - so I whipped out the card and made an order:

Brian Tooely Racing "Truck Norris" cam, new lifters, rockers, springs, rods, gaskets, trays....and "while I'm here" new oil pump, timing set, sensors, etc.

All in all the job went simply enough, though I did wind up with some new tools (harmonic balancer puller, installer, valve spring compressor, bigger breaker bar).

Got her buttoned up, and maaaaannnnnn did she run rough. Turns out, you MUST tune this cam. No way will she idle without.

Tips I learned along the way:
  • To remove the harmonic balancer:
    • Wrap a heavy chain through the balancer and around the front cross member. That will keep the crank from rotating and allow your breaker bar to work. Same on the install, but without the breaker bar.
    • Breaker bar needed 6' black pipe.
  • To remove the oil pan:
    • Remove all bolts for front diff, but not the axles.
    • Just lower the diff on a small jack stand.
  • Oil level sensor:
    • Turns out, this is orientation specific. Mine is on "off key" but seated.
    • Next oil change I will remove it, confirm proper orientation with a meter, and re-install. If I feel like it's not well seated I'm not sure what I'll do but I may bypass. I check oil every other fill up out of habit and my rig has a good, reliable oil pressure gauge.
  • Tuning:
    • I wanted to go with the HP Tuner, but I'm a Mac user and didn't feel like spending money my wife will notice missing on a new PC (even a cheap one). So I went with Holley's Diablo Sport InTune i3 Platinum.
    • I adjust tune as follows:
      • Idle P/N no AC 700 RPM
      • Idle P/N w/AC 750 RPM
      • In gear no AC 800 RPM
    • After driving ~ 500 miles to TN and back I can probably dial each of those back about 50 RPM. I also noticed that she no longer down shifts on most of the hills of HWY 72 where she used to every time. I'm guessing that's due to some substantial torque increase.
Goldie now has a "muscle car lope" to her idle, and needs a muffler to match. She does get some looks at lights as the sound is a bit unconventional.

I am by no means a mechanic, but didn't find this work to be all to bad. In fact, I'm thinking of getting a junk yard 6L LS to rebuild over the course of many months (and a 4L60e to upgrade) then drop them in. Overkill? Maybe, but I seem to have been bitten by a bug here. I quite enjoyed this project.

I know I didn't go into too-great detail, but hope this helps someone or perhaps inspires you to take on a project like this.

KG
 

DintDobbs

Rank V

Advocate III

1,412
First Name
Daniel &
Last Name
the Vulture
@K-G Nice work, bro! Honestly, there is a sort of addiction to this kind of stuff. Tangible results are a lot of fun, even if the work to get there was monstrous.

I saved a truck from the junk yard once, had to do more work on that truck (including repairing structural damage) to get it back on the road than I have ever done to any vehicle before or since. I told myself I'd never go to such lengths again, but I know myself better than that.

Hope you have fun with this truck and future projects! Your wife should appreciate a working man. We play by working on our play when we aren't working on our work.
 

K-G

Rank V
Member

Enthusiast III

1,845
New Hope, Alabama, United States
First Name
Kajetan
Last Name
Groicher
Member #

23410

@K-G Nice work, bro! Honestly, there is a sort of addiction to this kind of stuff. Tangible results are a lot of fun, even if the work to get there was monstrous.

I saved a truck from the junk yard once, had to do more work on that truck (including repairing structural damage) to get it back on the road than I have ever done to any vehicle before or since. I told myself I'd never go to such lengths again, but I know myself better than that.

Hope you have fun with this truck and future projects! Your wife should appreciate a working man. We play by working on our play when we aren't working on our work.
Much appreciated! I’ve always loved tinkering and working on projects. Comes in handy with a sorta-prepper mindset.

I’ve got a lot planned for Goldie, too many “nexts” to chose from.

Good thing the wife is super supportive. This truck keeps me out of trouble, is a security blanket for the family, and there’s not a $1,000 monthly coming out of the account for a new truck.
 
  • Like
Reactions: DintDobbs