Lifter Problem
We are now at 8 years/65k miles, no major problems yet but they will appear some time.
If I want to stay with a C7, my choices will be to keep fixing this one or try to find a low miles 2019.
Or get a lobotomy so I don't mind the ugliness/cramped interior/etc of the C8.
I'm getting too old to switch to another type.
Day I feel that old, I would be ready for cremation.
This is why, personally, I think they just did what in the industry we call an MCE/MCA on the C8 (That's why 2026 got a "new" dash) So if they did 5 years of the old style they will do 5 years of the new one, likely. So we are looking at 2030 C9, Electric Corvette.
This is why, personally, I think they just did what in the industry we call an MCE/MCA on the C8 (That's why 2026 got a "new" dash) So if they did 5 years of the old style they will do 5 years of the new one, likely. So we are looking at 2030 C9, Electric Corvette.
Its shorthand for when a car isn't new but gets a "refresh". Typical things are new bumpers, tailgate/truck, head and tail lights, hood, interior dash and center console. The C8 was only an interior MCE/MCA. The key thing to understand a ground up build versus a mid-cycle is that for a mid-cycle the Body in White DOES NOT change, neither does a frame on a Bof vehicle. Suspension, Braking, Steering components are usually unchanged (they may be modified if the electric architecture changes but mounting points don't change). "Hard parts" in the Chassis are the same (like control arms). The doors are the same, usually no change, everything rear of a B-Pillar (so rear seats, and cargo area) is unchanged. The front seat might get a minor re-skin, but usually not.
Marketing likes to sell a mid-cycle as "all-new", poppycock. I can give you some examples of Ford from recent years. 20-24 Explorer versus 25+. 21-23 F-150, versus 24+. 15-17 F-150 versus 18-20. 18-21 Expedition versus 22-24. 20-23 Escape versus 24+, Maverick and Bronco Sport just MCA'd for 25. I don't know all the GM ones off hand anymore but a classic old one was 04-05 Malibu versus 06-07. A car lasts typically 3 years before a refresh, some were as short as two some as long as 4. The refresh usually represents the "mid-point" in that body in whites usage.
Some go through double refreshes. Fusion was one 2013-2016, the first refresh was two years 2017-2018, the second refresh was 2019-2020
Its shorthand for when a car isn't new but gets a "refresh". Typical things are new bumpers, tailgate/truck, head and tail lights, hood, interior dash and center console. The C8 was only an interior MCE/MCA. The key thing to understand a ground up build versus a mid-cycle is that for a mid-cycle the Body in White DOES NOT change, neither does a frame on a Bof vehicle. Suspension, Braking, Steering components are usually unchanged (they may be modified if the electric architecture changes but mounting points don't change). "Hard parts" in the Chassis are the same (like control arms). The doors are the same, usually no change, everything rear of a B-Pillar (so rear seats, and cargo area) is unchanged. The front seat might get a minor re-skin, but usually not.
Marketing likes to sell a mid-cycle as "all-new", poppycock. I can give you some examples of Ford from recent years. 20-24 Explorer versus 25+. 21-23 F-150, versus 24+. 15-17 F-150 versus 18-20. 18-21 Expedition versus 22-24. 20-23 Escape versus 24+, Maverick and Bronco Sport just MCA'd for 25. I don't know all the GM ones off hand anymore but a classic old one was 04-05 Malibu versus 06-07. A car lasts typically 3 years before a refresh, some were as short as two some as long as 4. The refresh usually represents the "mid-point" in that body in whites usage.
Some go through double refreshes. Fusion was one 2013-2016, the first refresh was two years 2017-2018, the second refresh was 2019-2020
I guess we'll see what happens when 2030 comes. If it's all electric, I would be out. I don't see an electric car in my lifetime (20 years). We don't have the infrastructure to give me the same convenience as gas being able to refuel in 10 minutes and almost everywhere.
Recap, Gen V LT 1 has:
Valves and Valve Springs
16 Lifters
8 of the lifters are solid, normal.
The other 8 are the AFM lifters, half solid and a the other half is a spring, hence a lifter spring. So unless OP was misinformed, he had a stuck lifter spring…either stuck open or stuck closed.
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Two different issues. One is the AFM lifter itself, and the other is the intake and exhaust valve springs that are on top of the head. The AFM lifter is on top of the cam.
Two different areas of the engine all together, AFM lifters are located inside the block and the intake and exhaust valve springs are located on the head.
You can replace a broken valve spring (intake and exhaust) without removing the head but you must remove the head to replace a defective AFM or regular lifter.
So, the original question remains, what failed? An AFM lifter or a intake or exhaust valve spring? The answer to this question would determines what repair is needed.
Two different issues. One is the AFM lifter itself, and the other is the intake and exhaust valve springs that are on top of the head. The AFM lifter is on top of the cam.
Two different areas of the engine all together, AFM lifters are located inside the block and the intake and exhaust valve springs are located on the head.
You can replace a broken valve spring (intake and exhaust) without removing the head but you must remove the head to replace a defective AFM or regular lifter.
So, the original question remains, what failed? An AFM lifter or a intake or exhaust valve spring? The answer to this question would determines what repair is needed.
This is why words are important.
Last edited by user051728; Nov 8, 2025 at 08:03 PM.
This is a picture of an AFM lifter, which is half solid and half spring. What would you call the spring portion of the lifter?
Again, this is why words are important. A valve spring, is separately serviceable from a valve.
Again, this is why words are important. A valve spring, is separately serviceable from a valve.
So what would YOU call it, seriously?
Do people go around calling the springs in struts, "strut springs" instead of referring to it as a strut, or just calling it a spring?
You're missing my point, and that is just throwing the word spring around leads to confusion, so we should use the right terms. If someone mistakenly refers to the AFM lifter as a "lifter spring" they should be corrected. Language exists to communicate clearly, what good does it if you can't do that?
Do people go around calling the springs in struts, "strut springs" instead of referring to it as a strut, or just calling it a spring?
You're missing my point, and that is just throwing the word spring around leads to confusion, so we should use the right terms. If someone mistakenly refers to the AFM lifter as a "lifter spring" they should be corrected. Language exists to communicate clearly, what good does it if you can't do that?
So, what would you call this component, and why do you oppose the colloquialism—and widely accepted terminology—of 'lifter spring'?
Do people go around calling the springs in struts, "strut springs" instead of referring to it as a strut, or just calling it a spring?
You're missing my point, and that is just throwing the word spring around leads to confusion, so we should use the right terms. If someone mistakenly refers to the AFM lifter as a "lifter spring" they should be corrected. Language exists to communicate clearly, what good does it if you can't do that?
”
The lifter spring will stay compressed to prevent the pistons from contacting the valves. This lifter design is a huge improvement over the old/troublesome design of the active fuel management lifters!”
You can find the quote on this page.
https://northernautoparts.com/afm-li...-00Xe4K6erCW4W
Let me know how it goes when you tell them you know more than they do and they’re using the wrong words that matter.


















