intheburbs
Full Access Member
It's not the engine you should be worried about. Based on just the engine, hell, you could pull 15,000 lbs.That's why literally everything we take camping with us goes into the trailer and not into the back of the Yukon. The ONLY things in the Yukon, besides seats and a steering wheel, are 2 adults, 2 small-ish kids (10 and 13), and a 65 lb. dog (all in about 650 lbs. of meat ). We even take the third row out on most camping trips. But again, that 6.2L pulls it all with ease and the truck and camper combo are very stable.
First, you have a less-than-optimal axle ratio - 3.42. 3.73, 4.10 or aftermarket 4.56 are better for towing. Second, I've always felt the weak link of the GM half-tons is the rear axle. Semifloater, prone to overheating on long drives with heavy loads. My 2001 Suburban is wearing rear axle number 4 precisely because of heavy long-distance towing. Third - weak half-ton brakes. The half-tons are underbraked. But I would expect with the 20s, you'd have the clearance to upgrade the size of your rotors.
Lastly, for those with newer GMT900s - don't get complacent and think the truck and integrated trailer brake will get you out of a death-sway. Make sure you've trained yourself to manually apply the trailer brakes in case of sudden/excessive sway. You have to pull out of excessive sway - you need tension on the hitch. You accomplish that by either mashing the gas (EXTREMELY counter-intuitive) or manually applying the trailer brakes. Practice it to a point you can do it instantly, without looking.