decembersend
Member
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2016
- Posts
- 63
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I did this job on a 2012 Yukon XL Denali 3 times, thanks to a bad set of lifter trays. The whole story is here, but the last page summarizes where I ended up and offers some tips that might be helpful.
My wife and I tow a 7000 lb camper with ours, so I wanted a cam that would be good for towing. My priorities were durability, drivability and towing power. I ended up with a Cam Motion Stage 2 truck cam (3-bolt, no VVT, high-lift version), and am happy with the choice. It's specifically designed for the 6.2, which is important because the flow characteristics of the heads is different than the cathedral port head engines. I previously had a BTR stage 2 truck cam in there but it was designed for the 5.3 and after putting the Cam Motion cam in could feel a significant difference in towing performance (stays in 5th gear 90% of the time now), and I have to remember to keep my foot out of it or I find myself accelerating uphill.
For reference, I also have a 2007 Yukon XL Denali that has the stock L92 engine (VVT, but no AFM) that I sometimes use to pull the same camper, and the Cam Motion cam out-pulls that factory cam, both off the line unloaded, and on the highway pulling the camper. You will do slightly better down low with a single bolt VVT cam, but since my priority was durability, I didn't want to deal with the cam phaser and the possibility of problems with it. I haven't missed it.
Cam specs:
Duration at .050 - 212/220
Lift with 1.7 - .553/.553
Lobe separation 117
Intake center line 112
That what I was having issues with when I looked for cams myself it all said 4.3 or 5.3 or 6.0, and I want one for the 6.2 but haven't found anything yet. I'm going to look into Cam Motion and see what they have to offer.
I'm also going to check out your story now.