2016 Yukon SLT-Hot engine towing up steep 7 mile grade

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

Larry Brew

TYF Newbie
Joined
Oct 6, 2017
Posts
5
Reaction score
1
I recently was pulling my camper up up a 7% grade, 7 miles long and the temp gauge went up to the last mark before hitting 260 red mark. I estimate the temp gauge was at 245-250. No engine overheating warning messages came on dash. I was doing around 40-45 MPH. I got very concerned about possible engine or tranny damage. Once I topped the hill the temp gauge went back to normal. It was in the high range for about 15-20 minutes. The Yukon runs fine ever since that happened and I learned I should have used manual mode and kept the RPM around 4000 to help cooling. Do you think I should be concerned?
 

Marky Dissod

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 3, 2023
Posts
1,894
Reaction score
2,597
Location
(718)-
I recently was pulling my camper up up a 7% grade, 7 miles long and the temp gauge went up to the last mark before hitting 260F red mark.
I estimate the temp gauge was at 245F-250F. No engine overheating warning messages came on dash. I was doing around 40-45 MpH.
I got very concerned about possible engine or tranny damage
AFTER THE FACT
Once I topped the hill the temp gauge went back to normal.
It was in the high range for about 15-20 minutes.
The Yukon runs fine ever since that happened, and I learned I should have used manual mode and kept the RpM around 4000 to help cooling.
Do you think I should be concerned?
Short answer: YES!
Longer answer: I am a pessimist, certainly, when compared to the above.
The amount of money someone would have to pay me to let coolant AND/OR ATF temp REACH 230F -
nevermind exceed 239F -
would cover the purchase of 2 or 3 used GMT800s in serviceable condition ... JUST IN CASE.

At the bare minimum - say, you're an optimist, and you also rolled a natural '20' -
since you did not mention changing your motor oil / ATF / antifreeze
you should not only change them NOW, you may also want to analyze the used fluids to
determine any damages.

The balanced way of looking at this:
Ever see pics of prez obama before vs after presidency? He looks like he aged more than 8 years,
because he DID. admin, lean back, I'm not tryna get political ... HERE. Point is:

You DEFINITELY prematurely aged your engine transmission AND cooling system up that 7% grade;
you ought to change your motor oil / ATF / antifreeze IMMEDIATELY.

Next time, use Tow / Haul mode, AND avoid towing in 5th / 6th / 7th / 8th, especially uphill.
 
OP
OP
L

Larry Brew

TYF Newbie
Joined
Oct 6, 2017
Posts
5
Reaction score
1
By the way, I just had a radiator flush and changed the Coolant a week before the trip and was towing in trailer mode when this happened!
 

15burban

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 8, 2023
Posts
153
Reaction score
269
Location
Wisconsin
How heavy was the camper you were towing? To a certain extent it doesn't really matter (coolant flush, etc) if you were towing more then it's rated for.
 

swathdiver

Full Access Member
Joined
May 18, 2017
Posts
19,582
Reaction score
26,269
Location
Treasure Coast, Florida
I recently was pulling my camper up up a 7% grade, 7 miles long and the temp gauge went up to the last mark before hitting 260 red mark. I estimate the temp gauge was at 245-250. No engine overheating warning messages came on dash. I was doing around 40-45 MPH. I got very concerned about possible engine or tranny damage. Once I topped the hill the temp gauge went back to normal. It was in the high range for about 15-20 minutes. The Yukon runs fine ever since that happened and I learned I should have used manual mode and kept the RPM around 4000 to help cooling. Do you think I should be concerned?
Hey Larry, what gear did you run that grade in? Since the cooling system had recently been serviced, it is possible that there is/was a bubble in the system and it was not a full capacity. You'll have to check that.

If yours were mine I would change the transmission fluid after that run. If it had been recently changed, I would change it at about 20K miles, 1/2 of the severe service schedule.
 

Geotrash

Dave
Supporting Member
Joined
Feb 16, 2018
Posts
6,423
Reaction score
15,916
Location
Richmond, VA
I recently was pulling my camper up up a 7% grade, 7 miles long and the temp gauge went up to the last mark before hitting 260 red mark. I estimate the temp gauge was at 245-250. No engine overheating warning messages came on dash. I was doing around 40-45 MPH. I got very concerned about possible engine or tranny damage. Once I topped the hill the temp gauge went back to normal. It was in the high range for about 15-20 minutes. The Yukon runs fine ever since that happened and I learned I should have used manual mode and kept the RPM around 4000 to help cooling. Do you think I should be concerned?
As a fellow heavy camper puller, I feel your pain. But in my opinion, if the coolant didn't boil (~260ºF), then you likely did no damage. But I also agree that something else is going on there for coolant temp to get that hot on a 5.3 towing up a 7% grade. I do that often here over the Appalachians and the hottest I've seen is 230-235ºF on a 95º day. And this is with a modified 6.2L putting out much more power and heat than a 5.3, with essentially the same cooling system.

I agree with James that you may have had some air trapped in the system, or perhaps you have a cooling fan not functioning right. We've also seen the factory radiators lose efficiency after 8-10 years and maybe 160K miles. Hard to say without more information in your case, but I would begin the troubleshooting process. And I also agree with James and Mark that an oil and transmission fluid change are both wise after a near-overheat event like that.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
132,295
Posts
1,865,513
Members
96,879
Latest member
teemassa8314
Top