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Help me identify this sound - 2007 Suburban 5.3

I saw that video a few days back. The issue is there is no inconsistent sound in that area through the stethoscope when it happens.

Might be worth dropping the dust cover while you are down there and see if the sound is more noticeable with it off. I think it's just a few bolts. And if the flywheel is hitting something you may see a nice shiney spot or marking somewhere.

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I saw that video a few days back. The issue is there is no inconsistent sound in that area through the stethoscope when it happens.
Do you have a borescope you can look at the flywheel with?

That is a rotating sound in Park and process of elimination should narrow down where it's coming from. I don't think the transmission parts move while in park so rule that out. Drive shaft does not move in park. That leaves the engine, flywheel and torque converter.
 
Might be worth dropping the dust cover while you are down there and see if the sound is more noticeable with it off. I think it's just a few bolts. And if the flywheel is hitting something you may see a nice shiney spot or marking somewhere.

View attachment 9661937
Sounds like my weekend is going to be filled with ramps, beer, some good music and my toolbox.

Does the starter need to come out to drop it?
 
Passing this along. As much as I despise AI, when it becomes a supplement to your actual knowledge, it becomes a pretty powerful tool. I haven't changed the fluid or filter yet because it's new but I will while I'm in there.

Here's the prompt after previous prompts:
The sound immediately disappears when it's in drive or reverse and comes and goes in park. It will sometimes do it at low speeds in drive but never at high speeds. Sound is loudest from the pan. I can't pick up a similar sound from the front bell housing.

ChatGPT response:

Perfect — that’s exactly the kind of detail that makes a solid diagnosis possible.

Based on everything you’ve told me, here’s the most likely and accurate explanation:



🎯 Working Diagnosis

Light, intermittent squeal coming from the pan area, disappears in Drive/Reverse, returns intermittently at idle or low speed.

That points very strongly to fluid resonance or cavitation inside the transmission’s valve body or filter pickup area, not a mechanical failure of the pump or torque converter.



⚙️ What’s Actually Happening

When your Suburban is in Park or Neutral, the transmission fluid flow pattern changes:

• The pump is still spinning, but the pressure demand is low.

• The filter and valve body experience fluctuating flow (small pockets of air or vibration in the pickup).

• This can cause a light, intermittent squeal or hiss that echoes off the pan — exactly what you’re hearing with your stethoscope.

When you shift into Drive or Reverse:

• Line pressure increases sharply.

• Fluid flow stabilizes — air bubbles collapse, resonance disappears.

That’s why the noise stops immediately.

At low speeds in Drive, when RPM and load are low, it can momentarily reappear before stabilizing again.



🧩 Why It’s Loudest at the Pan

The pan acts like a soundboard — any fluid turbulence or vibration in the filter neck or valve body gets amplified there.

Because you don’t hear it at the bellhousing, it’s not the pump or torque converter.

You’re literally hearing the sound of fluid vibration, not metal-on-metal contact.




🛠️ What You Can Do (Optional)

If you want to try to eliminate it:

1. Change the transmission filter and gasket.

• Use OEM-quality or ACDelco filter — cheap ones sometimes have loose neck seals that cause cavitation.

• Inspect the old filter neck O-ring to make sure it wasn’t hardened or deformed.

• Re-torque pan bolts evenly (~12 ft-lb).

2. Use fresh Dexron VI fluid (do not overfill).

• Overfilling slightly increases aeration, which can create that squeal.

3. Inspect for vibration at the cooler lines (lightly touch them while idling).

• A slightly loose line or bracket can amplify the same frequency.



🚗 Bottom Line

You don’t have a failing transmission.

This is a harmless, fluid-dynamic noise that’s fairly common on aging 4L60E/4L65E units.

Many GM trucks and SUVs do this intermittently as the filter O-ring stiffens with age or the valve body’s pressure regulator oscillates slightly.

If it:

• Stays intermittent,

• Doesn’t affect shifting or engagement, and

• The fluid stays clean and pink,

→ you can safely drive it for years without issue.




It then asked if I wanted a diagram of where the noise is likely occurring and produced this.
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