Short question: would a lift kit for a 2500 be a good route to go if I want to swap 14 bolt rear end and upgrade to HD 2500 front IFS on a 2007 Denali? (This would likely include some other upgrades noted below)
Long story:
I really like my '07 Denali. The body style and interior from 2007-2014, the aftermarket options, etc. Long term, I'd like to look into 14 bolt conversion and 6L90 upgrade (6L80 now), overbuild the Denali to handle the winter camping, hauling, etc. abuse while retaining the ability to drive everyday, take the wife and kids out around town (3 kids - because, irresponsibility). Maybe a mild lift, 3-4", nothing with huge tires - I think that is what the picture below has. This wouldn't be a rock crawler, no SAS for me... But, it would hit the mountain every winter and haul loads in the summer - I'd get closer to my dreams of a boat too.
I have a 1995 K2500 now too, this would allow me to shrink the fleet. I don't want to get a full size 2007-12 2500 suburban because 1. they're unicorns, 2. for all the hauling and full size plywood/drywall I carry with the K2500, the smaller Denali is really growing on me. I'll probably upgrade to a legit lift trailer I've been needing this whole time by offloading a vehicle.
It could also be my frustration in the light duty Denali drivetrain: the 6L80 transmission is build for a princess, and the shift points need a tune (BlackBearPerformance is in my future); my AWD t-case bearings already crapped out once, I've got a thread or two on here about that fiasco; I think the Denali rear end is different than the Tahoe/Suburban diff's, right? I've read that you can't just switch to 4WD from AWD, and others have exploded the rear end soon after doing so; for the NW winters up here, I want to lock the front wheels rather than let two diff's slip in the snow. The old 'Burb is definitely better in the snow right now.
This would be a long term build, acquire a long list of parts over time for sure.
I'm thinking look for wrecked/junkyard GM 2500 series rig and swap diff's, rebuild a 6L90, maybe try to upgrade the brakes... wondering if I can keep front IFS from a 2500 truck (I'm not going to be rock crawling, but would be a daily) by getting a 2500 lift kit?
Just curious.
Long story:
I really like my '07 Denali. The body style and interior from 2007-2014, the aftermarket options, etc. Long term, I'd like to look into 14 bolt conversion and 6L90 upgrade (6L80 now), overbuild the Denali to handle the winter camping, hauling, etc. abuse while retaining the ability to drive everyday, take the wife and kids out around town (3 kids - because, irresponsibility). Maybe a mild lift, 3-4", nothing with huge tires - I think that is what the picture below has. This wouldn't be a rock crawler, no SAS for me... But, it would hit the mountain every winter and haul loads in the summer - I'd get closer to my dreams of a boat too.
I have a 1995 K2500 now too, this would allow me to shrink the fleet. I don't want to get a full size 2007-12 2500 suburban because 1. they're unicorns, 2. for all the hauling and full size plywood/drywall I carry with the K2500, the smaller Denali is really growing on me. I'll probably upgrade to a legit lift trailer I've been needing this whole time by offloading a vehicle.
It could also be my frustration in the light duty Denali drivetrain: the 6L80 transmission is build for a princess, and the shift points need a tune (BlackBearPerformance is in my future); my AWD t-case bearings already crapped out once, I've got a thread or two on here about that fiasco; I think the Denali rear end is different than the Tahoe/Suburban diff's, right? I've read that you can't just switch to 4WD from AWD, and others have exploded the rear end soon after doing so; for the NW winters up here, I want to lock the front wheels rather than let two diff's slip in the snow. The old 'Burb is definitely better in the snow right now.
This would be a long term build, acquire a long list of parts over time for sure.
I'm thinking look for wrecked/junkyard GM 2500 series rig and swap diff's, rebuild a 6L90, maybe try to upgrade the brakes... wondering if I can keep front IFS from a 2500 truck (I'm not going to be rock crawling, but would be a daily) by getting a 2500 lift kit?
Just curious.