Hello everyone. I am new to the forum but have been lurking for a while. I would appreciate any help you call could provide on my issue. There are several other posts on this subject but I thought I would start a new thread as a last ditch effort to keep me from losing my friggin' mind and selling or trading in my beloved Yukon Denali.
The truck is a 2008 Yukon Denali 6.2L AWD with 119K miles. Overall the truck has been very well taken care of and hasn't done much towing in it's life. I've had it for the last year and a half and it had about 95K miles on it when I purchased it from an older gentleman who had taken really good care of it and did not tow with it.
I purchased the Denali because I like all the interior room and features but also I have a 20ft flat bed trailer that I use to tow my two Polaris RZRs and occasionally 3 RZRs out to the trails in the Colorado mountains and surrounding states. With the the trailer and 2 RZRs, the total towing shouldn't be more than ~5K lbs, which is well within the tow rating. Up until 6 weeks ago, it had performed flawlessly towing. I have used it to tow the two and even three RZRs and 6 people in the truck up and down most of the major passes in Colorado. About 8 weeks ago, me and a friend were taking my two RZRs up to some trails out past Divide CO. We drove up a relatively short incline that has a stop light at the top. When I got to the top of the hill and stopped for the light, the truck died. The dash lit up, the temp was way above normal and the DIC displayed a message about the overheat condition. Long story short, after getting towed to a shop and sitting for an hour, it started back up, ran fine and got us and the trailer back home on the downhill and flatter roads back to the house. I carry a scan tool in the truck and no codes were recorded and the check engine light was not on after it finally started back up. The shop confirmed no codes and performed a pressure test on the cooling system, which it passed.
Over the last few weeks I have replaced the following items:
Water pump
Thermostat
Fan Relays
Fan switch
Coolant temp sensor
Radiator
Radiator fans
Radiator fluid (original fluid was very clean when I replaced it)
Tonight I took the truck for a test drive with just the trailer attached. With some aggressive driving on an almost flat road by my house, the truck did the exact same thing. The temp shot up to 240-250 (I was using Torque and a bluetooth OBDII scanner to get an accurate temp reading), trans temp was around 210 (seems normalish) and when I pulled up to a light it shut off and wouldn't restart for almost exactly an hour again. Again no codes were recorded, no check engine light triggered.
The truck doesn't seem to be losing any coolant. While driving around Denver with no trailer, the temp stays around 200-210 in 95 degree heat and runs just fine. One thing I did notice that I thought was odd, when I replaced the radiator, almost no ATF came out of the trans cooler. Is that a problem? I am really frustrated at this point with the truck. I really love this thing but if it can't tow my ****, it's no good to me! If anyone has any ideas, I'd love to hear them.
I’m an ASE certified master tech, provided that the cooling fans are working, I am fairly certain that you have a failed head gasket or a cracked cylinder head. Simple removal of the spark plugs by a qualified tech and review of the plugs will normally yield a diagnosis. The first and most simple test I do for a suspected bad head gasket is remove the engine drive belt on a cold engine, remove radiator cap. Start engine, if you see ANY bubbles you have a failed gasket or a cracked head.
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