Suppose $n$ is a positive integer greater than 2, and $F$ is an arbitrary field with at least 4 elements.
Denote $\text{GL}_n(F)$ the general linear group in the usual sense and $U_n(F)$ the unipotent group in the sense that it consists of $n\times n$ upper-triangular matrices with 1's on the diagonal.
The inclusion $U_n(F)\hookrightarrow\text{GL}_n(F)$ induces a (unstable) homology homomorphism $f_k: H_k(U_n(F);\mathbb{Z})\to H_k(\text{GL}_n(F);\mathbb{Z})$ for any positive integer $k$.
And there is another map, a stable homology map: $g_k: H_k(U_n(F);\mathbb{Z})\to H_k(\text{GL}(F);\mathbb{Z})$.
How can I detect the image of $f_k$ (or $g_k$)? Is $\text{im}(f_k)$ or $\text{im}(g_k)$ always zero?
Background: In Suslin's paper [1] (Sublemma 4.4.2), he asserts that when $k=n=\text{char}(F)=3$ then $\text{im}(f_k)=\text{im}(g_k)=0$ with a reference directed to [2]. But from [2] it's quite unclear to me how to deduce the assertion made in [1].
[1] A. Suslin, K3 of a field, and the Bloch group (Russian), Trudy Mat. Inst. Steklov 183 (1990), 180-199. English transl. in Proc. Steklov Inst. Math. (1991), 217-239.
[2] A. Suslin, Stability in algebraic K-theory, pp. 304-333 in Lecture Notes in Math. 966, Springer-Verlag, 1982.