Did the first long distance tow with the wife's Denali dMax.
Pulled a Ranger 621 (just under 5000lbs) from Fargo ND to Lake of the Ozarks in MO, 750 miles each way.
Typically I'm using either a Ram ecoDiesel or a Ram 3/4 Cummins, using the Denali was a bit of a change up.
90% of the trip is on interstate, so cruise set 5mph over the speed limit (85 - 75mph). The Denali did a good job pulling the boat and the mileage was very good (15.2 mpg for the entire trip).
The dMax edged out the ecoDiesel (14mpg is typical) and the Cummins (13mpg is typical) in the mileage department. I'd give the dMax a slight edge over the ecoDiesel in the power department as well. From a ride perspective the Denali was head and shoulders above both (all good so far).
No oil usage; same level as when it left.
The DEF usage was crazy high (8.3 gallons of DEF to 1500 miles). Which in itself I can live with, using a lot of DEF, no biggie, just watch the gauge and you'll be fine.
ecoDiesel and Cummins would have used maybe 3 gallons each, leaving with a full tank would easily get you back.
But...
Here is where GMC messed up, and they messed up big time.
After say 600 miles of towing the truck had more then 1/2 tank of DEF and it went into limp mode because it didn't think it had enough DEF to continue. I was on the side of the interstate (in the rain) dumping in a 2.5 gallon jug (of which all 2.5 gallons didn't even fit as the tank wasn't even under 1/2 full).
So how did this happen, don't you get a warning message?
The dMax went from full DEF and full fuel to limp mode at 3/4 full of diesel at the next tank. The 'warning' was you have 299 miles DEF range remaining, then within 10 miles limit mode kicked in.
Called the dealer, yep, it's normal, they said to keep a jug in the back of the Denali.
Pulled a Ranger 621 (just under 5000lbs) from Fargo ND to Lake of the Ozarks in MO, 750 miles each way.
Typically I'm using either a Ram ecoDiesel or a Ram 3/4 Cummins, using the Denali was a bit of a change up.
90% of the trip is on interstate, so cruise set 5mph over the speed limit (85 - 75mph). The Denali did a good job pulling the boat and the mileage was very good (15.2 mpg for the entire trip).
The dMax edged out the ecoDiesel (14mpg is typical) and the Cummins (13mpg is typical) in the mileage department. I'd give the dMax a slight edge over the ecoDiesel in the power department as well. From a ride perspective the Denali was head and shoulders above both (all good so far).
No oil usage; same level as when it left.
The DEF usage was crazy high (8.3 gallons of DEF to 1500 miles). Which in itself I can live with, using a lot of DEF, no biggie, just watch the gauge and you'll be fine.
ecoDiesel and Cummins would have used maybe 3 gallons each, leaving with a full tank would easily get you back.
But...
Here is where GMC messed up, and they messed up big time.
After say 600 miles of towing the truck had more then 1/2 tank of DEF and it went into limp mode because it didn't think it had enough DEF to continue. I was on the side of the interstate (in the rain) dumping in a 2.5 gallon jug (of which all 2.5 gallons didn't even fit as the tank wasn't even under 1/2 full).
So how did this happen, don't you get a warning message?
The dMax went from full DEF and full fuel to limp mode at 3/4 full of diesel at the next tank. The 'warning' was you have 299 miles DEF range remaining, then within 10 miles limit mode kicked in.
Called the dealer, yep, it's normal, they said to keep a jug in the back of the Denali.