Description
About the GMC Truck 3500 Series Spindle
Direct fit GMC 3500 Series 1-ton heavy duty truck across multiple production eras: GMT400 1988-2000 (C/K 3500 naming), GMT800 2001-2007 (renamed Sierra 3500/3500HD), GMT900 2007-2014 (Sierra 3500HD continuation more refined), K2XX 2014-2018 (Sierra 3500HD modern), T1 2019-current (all-new Sierra 3500HD with AT4 off-road variant and Denali premium trim).
GMC 3500 positioning: 1-ton heavy duty truck above 2500 (3/4-ton documented Batch 56 vaz517) and below 4500/5500 medium-duty in GMC’s full-size truck hierarchy. Heaviest consumer GM pickup truck serving maximum-capability heavy-duty applications including heaviest towing (~14,000+ lbs conventional, ~30,000+ lbs gooseneck/5th wheel properly equipped), heavy hauling, construction, agriculture, fleet/utility work, heavy camper applications. Sister vehicle Chevrolet 3500/Silverado 3500HD (identical mechanical vehicle, GMC was ‘Professional Grade’ sister brand).
Engines: GMT400 era same family as GMC 2500 (5.7L Small Block V8, 7.4L Big Block 454ci V8, 6.5L Detroit Diesel V8 turbo predecessor to Duramax). GMT800+ era introduced new generation: 6.0L Vortec V8 (LS engine family), 8.1L Vortec 8100 V8 Big Block (496ci – LARGEST GM gas V8 in modern era, successor to 7.4L), and 6.6L DURAMAX DIESEL V8 (BRAND NEW 2001+ joint Isuzu/GM diesel engine, built by DMAX Ltd joint venture in Moraine Ohio, legendary diesel through current production with LB7/LBZ/LMM/LML/L5P variant evolution).
Transmissions: 4L80E heavy-duty 4-speed electronic automatic (the famous heavy-duty automatic for big block/diesel), ALLISON 1000/2000 5-speed automatic (the LEGENDARY ALLISON TRANSMISSION pairing with Duramax from 2001+, made by Allison Transmission Inc heavy-duty division), Allison 1000 6-speed automatic (GMT900 era), Allison 10-speed automatic (modern T1 era), NV4500 5-speed heavy-duty manual (GMT400 era diesel famous heavy-duty manual), NV5600 6-speed manual (later applications). Drivetrain 4×2 (C3500/Sierra 3500 RWD) or 4×4 (K3500/Sierra 3500HD 4WD). DUALLY (DRW) Dual Rear Wheel STANDARD on many 3500 configurations – the famous 3500 ‘dually’ six-wheel layout for maximum payload/towing.
Body styles: Regular Cab (2-door commercial), Extended Cab (3-door GMT400 or 4-door GMT800+), Crew Cab (4-door full, more common GMT800+), Chassis Cab (commercial body builder for tow trucks/dump trucks/service bodies). Bed lengths short ~6.5 ft or long ~8 ft. Trim levels evolution: GMT400 Sierra/Sierra Classic/SLE/SLT, GMT800/GMT900 WT/SLE/SLT/Denali premium, modern WT/SLE/SLT/AT4 off-road/Denali (DENALI is GMC’s premium luxury trim heritage started late 1990s).
Spindle definition: front axle component that holds the wheel bearing and hub assembly. Functions: wheel bearing mounting (bearings press into spindle), steering pivot point (connects to steering knuckle via ball joints upper/lower), brake component mounting (brake rotor centers on hub, caliper mounts to spindle bracket), wheel attachment (wheel studs in hub for wheel mounting), axle pass-through (4WD versions have CV axle pass-through for front drive). RWD spindles simpler (bearing surface only). 4WD spindles complex with CV axle splines. Cast iron or forged steel construction for heavy-duty durability. Some heavy-duty 3500 models use Dana 60 solid front axle with spindle as part of axle assembly.
GMC 3500 Heritage
Production: 1988-current (multiple eras)
Position: 1-ton heavy duty (heaviest GM pickup)
Sister: Chevrolet 3500 / Silverado 3500HD
Legendary Diesel: 6.6L Duramax (joint Isuzu/GM)
Heaviest Gas: 8.1L Vortec 8100 (496ci) GMT800/900
Famous Big Block: 7.4L 454ci GMT400 era
Premium Trim: Denali luxury since late 1990s
Dually Standard: Most 3500 configurations DRW
Spindle Function
Wheel Bearing Mount: Bearings press into spindle surface
Steering Pivot: Ball joints upper/lower for steering
Brake Mounting: Caliper bracket and rotor center
Wheel Attachment: Hub holds wheel studs
4WD CV Axle: Pass-through for front drive
Construction: Cast iron or forged steel
Safety Critical: Alignment required after replacement
- GMC 3500 Coverage:
| GMC C3500 1988-2000 (GMT400 4×2) | RWD heavy duty |
| GMC K3500 1988-2000 (GMT400 4×4) | 4WD heavy duty |
| GMC Sierra 3500 2001-2007 (GMT800) | Lighter HD variant |
| GMC Sierra 3500HD 2001-2007 (GMT800) | Heavy duty distinct |
| GMC Sierra 3500HD 2007-2014 (GMT900) | Continuation refined |
| GMC Sierra 3500HD 2014-2018 (K2XX) | Modern era updated |
| GMC Sierra 3500HD 2019-Current (T1) | All-new with AT4/Denali |
| Drivetrain Specific: | |
| RWD Models | Simpler front spindle (no CV axle) |
| 4WD Models | CV axle pass-through spindle |
| Solid Front Axle (Dana 60) Variants | Heavy-duty solid axle spindle |
| Independent Front Suspension | Different spindle design |
| Side Specific: | |
| Driver Side | Verify side specific to vehicle |
| Passenger Side | May differ from driver side |
| Sister Vehicles: | |
| Chevrolet 3500 / Silverado 3500HD | Same spindle typically |
| Chevrolet/GMC Suburban 3500 | May share |
| Solid Axle Variants | Dana 60 specifically |
| NOT Compatible Across Eras | GMT400 vs GMT800+ vs T1 different designs |
| NOT Compatible Across Drivetrain | RWD vs 4WD different spindles |
Call (240) 301-0095. Critical questions: (1) Year (1988-current). (2) Era (GMT400/GMT800/GMT900/K2XX/T1 – different designs). (3) Drivetrain (RWD or 4WD – DIFFERENT spindles). (4) Side (driver or passenger – may differ). (5) Solid front axle (Dana 60) or independent front suspension. (6) Engine (less critical but verify heavy duty configuration). (7) Hub style (bolt-on hub assembly vs press-in bearing).
- No cracks anywhere on spindle body SAFETY CRITICAL – replace if any visible cracks
- Wheel bearing press-fit surfaces sound Inner race surface intact, smooth

















Aristides Konstantopoulos-Stamatides –
Replaced cracked front spindle on my 2008 GMC Sierra 3500HD Denali Crew Cab 4×4 dually (GMT900 era 2007-2014 Sierra 3500HD continuation more refined truck, 6.6L Duramax LMM diesel V8 ~365 HP and 660 lb-ft torque the legendary joint Isuzu/GM diesel from DMAX Ltd Moraine Ohio joint venture, Allison 1000 6-speed automatic transmission the legendary Allison Transmission Division heavy-duty automatic pairing famous with Duramax, 4WD K3500-equivalent designation, Crew Cab body, 8-foot long bed, DRW dually configuration the famous 3500 six-wheel layout, Denali premium luxury trim – GMC’s flagship trim heritage started late 1990s with leather interior chrome accents distinctive styling). Original spindle had cracked from heavy off-road use and curb impact damage. Vaz educated me extensively on the GMC 3500 multi-era heritage (GMT400 1988-2000 C/K 3500, GMT800 2001-2007 renamed Sierra 3500/3500HD, my GMT900 2007-2014 era, K2XX 2014-2018, T1 2019+), Sierra 3500 vs 3500HD distinction (GMT800+ era split 1-ton designation with HD being heavier duty payload/towing rating), 6.6L Duramax variants evolution (LB7 2001-2004 first variant with injector issues, LLY 2004.5-2005 with EGR, LBZ 2006-2007 considered best variant, my LMM 2007.5-2010 with DPF filter, LML 2011-2016 with DEF urea, modern L5P 2017+ ~445 HP/910 lb-ft most powerful), Allison Transmission heritage (originally Allison Engineering 1908, bought GM 1929, spun off 2007, Allison 1000 5-speed/6-speed/10-speed evolution pairing with Duramax), Denali trim heritage (introduced late 1990s starting with Yukon Denali, premium luxury trim positioning between SLT and Cadillac, named after Mount Denali Alaska), DMAX Ltd Moraine Ohio joint venture context, dually DRW heritage (standard on many 3500 configurations for maximum capability), and spindle theory (front axle component for wheel bearing/steering/brake/CV axle pass-through 4WD). Sourced from 2009 Sierra 3500HD Denali Duramax donor (matching configuration). The GMC 3500 heritage and Duramax/Allison context was excellent.
Wilhelmine Hartmann-Schweighofer –
Bought front spindle for my 1995 GMC K3500 Sierra SLT Extended Cab 4×4 (GMT400 era 1988-2000 the original C/K 3500 naming era, 7.4L L21 Big Block V8 the famous 454 cubic inch Vortec 7400 heavy-duty gas workhorse for towing/hauling Multi-Port Fuel Injection ~290 HP/410 lb-ft torque – the famous Big Block GM engine family different from Small Block 305/350ci, 4L80E heavy-duty 4-speed electronic automatic transmission paired with Big Block for towing applications, K3500 4WD configuration with NP241 transfer case, Extended Cab body with single rear-hinged smaller passenger door GMT400 era 3-door design, 8-foot long bed, dually DRW configuration the famous 3500 six-wheel layout, Sierra SLT premium GMT400 trim). Original spindle had worn bearing surfaces from neglected wheel bearing failure. Vaz patiently explained the GMC 3500 multi-era heritage (my GMT400 era pre-GMT800 renaming to Sierra 3500HD, sister Chevrolet C/K 3500 identical mechanical, 1-ton heavy duty positioning above 2500 below 4500/5500 medium-duty), GMT400 era engine family same as 2500 Batch 56 vaz517 reference (5.7L Small Block V8 most common gas, my 7.4L Big Block 454ci heavy-duty workhorse, 6.5L Detroit Diesel V8 turbo predecessor to Duramax modern), transmissions (700R4/4L60E lighter applications, my 4L80E heavy-duty for Big Block/Diesel, TH400 earlier Turbo-Hydramatic, NV4500 5-speed heavy-duty manual famous for diesel applications), C-Series vs K-Series naming (my K3500 4×4 vs C3500 RWD), dually DRW heritage (standard on many 3500 configurations for maximum capability with wider rear fenders and six-wheel layout), GMT800 1999-2007 evolution context (Sierra 3500 vs 3500HD split, new 6.0L Vortec V8 LS family, 8.1L Vortec 8100 Big Block successor to 7.4L, brand-new 6.6L Duramax 2001+ joint Isuzu/GM via DMAX Ltd Moraine Ohio), and spindle theory (front axle component holding wheel bearing/hub for steering/brake/CV axle pass-through 4WD, RWD vs 4WD different designs, cast iron/forged steel construction, safety critical alignment required after replacement). Sourced from 1994 K3500 donor matching 4WD configuration. One star off because spindle is heavy component requiring careful packaging – took 8 days for shipping vs my expected 5 days due to freight. But the GMC 3500 GMT400 heritage and Big Block context was excellent.