Forum Discussion

Mickeyfan0805's avatar
Sep 05, 2019

When do you throw in the towel?

We have a 2006 Suburban 2500 with the 8.1. It tows like a dream and only has 115k miles on it. The problem? It's age is starting to take it's toll. In addition to having to replace head gaskets earlier this spring, we are recurrently running into the impacts of 14 years of salt exposure in the northern winters. In the past 12 months we've had to replace the rear AC lines, the gear shifter and cable, and on a July trip the front brake lines blew (the rear are ok, but will soon need to be done).

We now have all of that work done, plus brakes and tires that are only a couple of years (maybe 15-20k miles) old. Our local shop says it is worth limping along with it, and I have felt ok still putting money into it, but DW is getting increasingly frustrated and we are finding ourselves running into surprise repairs more and more often (to the tune of some $4,000 this year alone).

When have you all decided to throw it in? What is your litmus test?

33 Replies

  • I've had to drop a few k into my van the last few years, I've had the same thought process as you. How much is too much? I don't have to worry about rust out here, but other things are failing. When I've run the financial numbers, it's always worth repairing and keeping vs replacing.

    It can snowball quickly though, I dropped over 10k in 2 years a while back on driveline and A/C repairs for a van that books at a few thousand... But that book value is not really fair, what would it actually cost me to replace it with something else?

    In your case with a big block Suburban, could you even replace it?

    I'd suspect for you, rust will be the determining factor.
  • I'm from SE Wisconsin. I remember our cars rusting through so bad that you could see through the holes in the floorboard down to the street. Here in Colorado my 1999 Suburban has hardly any rust at all. I decided it was in good enough shape to be worth a new engine (**** plastic head gaskets). Now that you have put so much money into yours, I would probably wait and see if the repairs hold out.
  • I decided to get a new truck when my old truck got to the point where I wasn't sure if I could trust it to tow our 5th wheel on a long trip without a breakdown. Like yours it seemed like every time we went somewhere the truck developed a problem. Most were small but when one of the A-Arms broke it was the turning point. I could no longer trust the truck.

    The new truck has made towing a dream. I decided to get a truck that had way more towing capacity than I needed. Not having to worry about breakdowns make for a much better towing experience.