jl449
Full Access Member
Its not the weight, its the length. You will hate life pulling that long of a trailer with a yukon.
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I see.... I may have to rethink this...
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Its not the weight, its the length. You will hate life pulling that long of a trailer with a yukon.
Sent from my SM-S727VL using Tapatalk
7000 - 7500 lbs at 31 feet is no joke. You will need a good WDH with a sway bar and trailer brakes. Did your Denali come with a brake controller? This weight will push you right through the stop light without the right set up. Not to exaggerate but, while there are longer and heavier trailers being towed all over the place, this is a heavy load for a short vehicle. Yes the Denali is capable, I believe it specs out at 12,000 lbs tow rating, but please take on this task with all seriousness and don't be in a hurry to get anywhere.
With that said...go for it! Oh and take water with you that's the least of your worries. You'll get used to it.
Yeah I'm thinking that you'll be in the 7000 range once you "Outfit" the trailer with clothes, bedding, toiletries, food, eating and cooking utensils, cleaning supplies, black/gray water hoses and supplies, gadgets (chargers, tv, music, games, entertainment), house batteries, propane, water, throw rugs (in door and outdoor), various camping supplies (chairs, Firestarter, marshmallow sticks, etc), generator, extension cords and adapters, outdoor string lights, bug stuff (swatters, spray, candles) flash lights, sporting (guns, fishing, binoculars, butterfly net) the list will grow with time.The one we are looking at is coming in dry weight at 5878l lbs. If I do get it will be short trips less than 3 hour drive. The Denali does have the tow package with brake controller.
Backing a trailer. Work from the bottom of the steering wheel. When backing the trailer will go which ever way you turn the BOTTOM of the wheel. Best advice I ever got.Finally bought the travel trailer. It measures 31.5 ft and dry weight at 5743lbs. Came with an Eas-lift WDH and sway cntrl. The drive home was about 2.5 hour and had some gusty winds. The SUV handle it fine @55 mph. Initially there was some sway but pulled over and adjusted the sway tension and it was way better. This is my first trailer so I was very nervous driving it home . I got use to it and the last hour of the drive was smooth. Backing it up was an experience but lucky I had good people to help me out.
Unfortunately I took my Yukon to the dealer a few weeks ago for oil consumption (burned 2 qrt of oil in 5k miles) and may need a new engine now. They are tracking my oil consumption now. If it burns oil they will write it up for a new motor. I'm also dealing with GMC directly. I may get that 2500 Denali diesel after all!
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Backing a trailer. Work from the bottom of the steering wheel. When backing the trailer will go which ever way you turn the BOTTOM of the wheel. Best advice I ever got.