A safety probe has been launched in the US after the small-block ‘L87’ V8 that powers the Chevrolet Silverado pickup and other General Motors models allegedly suffered failures even following a fix applied as part of a 2025 recall of 721,000 vehicles.

The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) issued the probe on January 16, 2026, after 36 owners had complained to the auto safety body alleging engine failure after having their vehicles ‘fixed’ during the previous recall.

“The Office of Defects Investigation (ODI) has received 36 Vehicle Owner Questionnaires (VOQs) alleging engine failure in vehicles subject to Recall 25V-274,” the NHTSA notice said.

“In each VOQ, the engine had the recall remedy completed prior to the reported failure incident… ODI is opening this Recall Query (RQ) to assess the adequacy of the remedy for Recall 25V-274.”

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A second recall has not yet been issued in the US, nor Australia or New Zealand. We’ve contacted GM Australia and New Zealand (GMANZ) for comment.

It’s unclear whether the recall ‘fix’ was not applied correctly or whether separate issues have caused subsequent engine failures in L87-powered vehicles.

The 2025 global recall impacted 721,000 vehicles fitted with the 6.2-litre V8 engine, including almost 10,000 vehicles in Australia and New Zealand.

It involved 2021-2024 Silverado 1500s sold in Australia and New Zealand. The Silverado 1500 was the second-best selling full-size pickup in Australia in 2025, behind the Ram 1500 but ahead of the Toyota Tundra and Ford F-150.

The recall didn’t affect 2025 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 models, nor any examples of the related GMC Yukon Denali, which was launched in Australia last year.