I used headliner material from jo ann fabrics to redo mine, it is the cloth foam backed stuff. It was affordable, and came out good.
I got this rear ac line kit for mine last year and so far it works great. https://www.autocoolingsolutions.com/ac-lines/1990-gmc-suburban-rear-ac-lineWell, another trip is being planned as we speak. Las Vegas. Probably gonna go to Santa Fe, NM for a couple of days and then make our way to Las Vegas towards the end of Sep.
A few things I'd like to do to the ol' girl.
Fix rear AC. Las Vegas isn't known for being cool and if I end up bringing in-laws, there's gonna be a lot of hot bodies in the burb that will need to be cooled. The rear lines had rotted off. I talked to the local AC shop about bringing my lines in and having them cut them back to good metal and then reweld new tubing and fittings on to them. I have a new rear AC evaporator and expansion valve. Just need to get it all installed.
I also need to redo the headliner. Anyone have a suggestion for material that's better than the cloth stuff?
Cruise control. After swapping to the manual, the cruise no worky. I drove it all the way to Denver with no cruise and survived but I'd rather not do that again.
Steering box. Needs to get rebuilt. I would love to have the existing one redone but means the truck has to be down for a while. I could live without this but I will def try to make it happen.
Damn electric door locks don't work. Not the biggest deal but it's on the list.
Need a new spare.
I'm sure more things will be added.
One thing that has been really annoying me is the "click" in the clutch pedal. Now there's no telling how worn that pedal is since I bought it used but what is the cure for that or is this just something that is considered normal?
Clutch pedal pivot bushing is the same as the brake pedal. Which I think can still be sourced through Dorman.
As far as easy, smooth feeling clutch for a 4500 I would say you can’t beat the factory integrated slave release bearing design that came on the ‘96 and later 4500’s. No z-bar, no problem external slave or mechanical linkage. Goes together easy with an earls brake hose and two adapter fittings. Combine it with a centerforce clutch and it’s butter smooth and gets better as engine rpm increases. Plus I don’t get an overworked left leg driving it.
If it's good enough for my freightliner big rig more than 600k miles and going, it's good enough for my squarehmmm i guess i missed that this was an nv4500. i was thinking sm465 stuff. how reliable/ long lived are the internal slaves? i would be terrified that i would have to drop the tranny to get in there!
but i have no experience with them
My mind changes daily. I honestly have no real issues with the TBI 350 other than lack of power. I'm inclined to put a small cam in it and be done. When i pulled the intake I realized it was a roller block so I could install one of those high dollar computer controlled cams from Comp and a set of vortec heads and probably be tickled to death.Still kicking around engine ideas?
Martin
I am the opposite.One thing I've really been thinking hard about is a lift kit. I do not intend on running bigger tires or anything like that but I genuinely do not like how low the sub sits. Offroad design put together a lift for one of their shop vehicles that is a sub and it was something like 3" and overall pretty reasonable looking.
Im half tempted to call them up and have them put something together for me.
Great info!The internal slaves are pretty darn reliable. Similar part in my factory 5-speed S-10 has 200k of my driving without an issue.
Don’t go no name cheap on the part though. Get oem, Delco or Dorman. I got the Dorman part for my 4500.
I’ll say this all Manual trans GM trucks from ‘96 on used this setup. Even the last gm trucks to come with a manual the gmt800 versions.
I look at it this way if you screwed up a standard release bearing you would still be pulling the trans. Changing out the quick release hose connection at the integrated slave for a threaded an fitting you eliminated another possible fail point.
As an added item of reassurance Larry removed the advanced adapter bell housing and stock external slave setup on his polar bear burb for the exact setup as mine. He was not getting any consistent pedal feel with the AA bell and slave setup. He had rebuilt the pedal with new bushings and spring. Still didn’t feel right. So once he did the swap the clutch issue went away. Though he is kicking himself for not using a centerforce clutch.
I have a 2" ORD lift on my K5. Take a look at my build thread if your looking for "low" lift inspiration.One thing I've really been thinking hard about is a lift kit. I do not intend on running bigger tires or anything like that but I genuinely do not like how low the sub sits. Offroad design put together a lift for one of their shop vehicles that is a sub and it was something like 3" and overall pretty reasonable looking.
Im half tempted to call them up and have them put something together for me.
Ill take a look. ThanksI have a 2" ORD lift on my K5. Take a look at my build thread if your looking for "low" lift inspiration.
I am the opposite.
I try to keep it as low as possible with the tires I want.
My 74 sub has 33" tires with no lift and my 98 has 35" with no lift.
Oh I have skinny tires, 255/85/17I really like the lifted trucks in skinny tires. I'm weird like that.