Update 5/2/21 - Bounce and Porpoising - Especially Towing

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

Mr Dan

TYF Newbie
Joined
Jun 17, 2019
Posts
6
Reaction score
1
Bro,
You have the right ride....6.0L and don't denalis have auto-leveling.

I bought this sub a few years back to go on Jet-Ski camping trips (where they don't have hotels).
6.2, 10spd and it hauls butt.
Its only a 1/2 ton but it has auto leveling and when I realized it could easily tow my 25ft trailer with another car in it (about 8Klbs) I sold
the 2500 RAM cummins, which just sat around waiting for a tow job. I sheet you not, the sub tows just as good as the RAM did
Gets a little worse gas mileage when towing (10 vs 13), but when not towing it gets like 27mpg on the highway. GM-techno-magic.

View attachment 277556

I ripped the seats out and slid in a queen so I can cool down and sleep back there.
I'd rather camp with A/C and Bose than pitch a tent...especially when its 95 at night.

View attachment 277557

And I fit this bubble insulation stuff from Home Depot in the windows for cooling and privacy.
It works really good....except I don't have bug screens (to crack the windows)....still have to figure that one out.
View attachment 277558

But its only a 1/2 ton and it tows really well.
 

Mr Dan

TYF Newbie
Joined
Jun 17, 2019
Posts
6
Reaction score
1
For camping in our NBS we us a roll of lightweight nylon screen and magnetic tape. After a little adjustment, instant window screens.
 

BigDogYJ

Member
Joined
Aug 27, 2018
Posts
55
Reaction score
127
Location
Earth
I’ve got an 04 2500 XL that I tow different trailers pretty regularly 1500-7500#. The heaviest was my car/equipment trailer with an 07 2500HD crew cab pickup. Probably weighed near 10k as my trailer unloaded is 2500lb. No porpoising effect that I recall. It can bounce at times in rough highways but nothing uncontrollable or bounce out of seat effect The only change I’ve done to suspension is adding the road master active suspension for leaf springs. It’s a coil spring that mounts across the top of the leaf and it’s adjustable. Works great. I also run bilstein 5150 reservoir shocks f/r. Rides stiff unloaded but drives like a dream when loaded up. Check hitch bolts and make sure everything back there is tight. And again level and 12-15% tongue weight is key.

link to Roadmaster suspension: https://activesuspension.com/products/kits/1984-2012-chevrolet-2500-suburban-suv/


We are looking to get a 28’ TT in a couple months. It supposedly has a 650# dry tongue weight and 9600# gross. I’ve already ordered the hitch (ProPride 3p). So I’ll likely have some first hand experience with a TT. Keep us informed as you work through it.
 

Matthew Jeschke

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 28, 2017
Posts
1,987
Reaction score
1,386
Location
Sahuarita, Arizona
Somebody already posibly answered this anx maybe your symptoms are something else....

You want a damper (shock) that is matched to your spring pressure. If you have a shock spec'd for 1500 chassis spring then you will be underdamped and bouncy. The shock won't have enough dampening (won't be tuned) to filter out the oscillations / bumps your springs expirence. Conversely if too strong / overdamped will feel like all the bumps transfer through to the cabin.

The remaining things, I have no experience with, but if your trailor / hitch is weighted wrong you will get feedback from the trailor to the front end of truck, possibly enough to break the tires loose. I have seen accidents where this happened.

I desined a couple racecar chassis back in the day. We had long talks about this sort of thing. I am sure you just need a minor tweek then will be riding great :)

Sent from my SM-A505U using Tapatalk
 

fasteddy

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 19, 2015
Posts
377
Reaction score
541
For camping in our NBS we us a roll of lightweight nylon screen and magnetic tape. After a little adjustment, instant window screens.

You should post a picture of that....I'd like to see that.
Please continue in the "interiors" section so we don't step on his thread.
 

fasteddy

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 19, 2015
Posts
377
Reaction score
541
I’ve got an 04 2500 XL that I tow different trailers pretty regularly 1500-7500#. The heaviest was my car/equipment trailer with an 07 2500HD crew cab pickup. Probably weighed near 10k as my trailer unloaded is 2500lb. No porpoising effect that I recall. It can bounce at times in rough highways but nothing uncontrollable or bounce out of seat effect The only change I’ve done to suspension is adding the road master active suspension for leaf springs. It’s a coil spring that mounts across the top of the leaf and it’s adjustable. Works great. I also run bilstein 5150 reservoir shocks f/r. Rides stiff unloaded but drives like a dream when loaded up. Check hitch bolts and make sure everything back there is tight. And again level and 12-15% tongue weight is key.

link to Roadmaster suspension: https://activesuspension.com/products/kits/1984-2012-chevrolet-2500-suburban-suv/


We are looking to get a 28’ TT in a couple months. It supposedly has a 650# dry tongue weight and 9600# gross. I’ve already ordered the hitch (ProPride 3p). So I’ll likely have some first hand experience with a TT. Keep us informed as you work through it.


2500 with an LBZ, very nice!
 

iCajun

Member
Joined
Mar 27, 2015
Posts
72
Reaction score
38
No help other than what the others have mentioned. I have about the same vehicle, 2005 2500 8.1L, all stock except for the H2 wheels and somewhat oversize tires. Have towed trailers from aluminum snowmobile to 10k travel trailers and I haven't had porpoising. Tire pressure and tongue weight is generally all there is to adjust. Good luck.
 

wildcatgoal

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 18, 2020
Posts
140
Reaction score
132
Um, is it me or are the axles on that trailer literally dead length center instead of slightly back behind center? Last time I towed a trailer where the wheels weren't oriented more backward was a car trailer and I had to fight the damn thing teeter tottering the whole time which was causing the front end to effectively bounce. The guy built/welded the trailer himself... evidently wrong or maybe for an application that had far more weight on the front of the trailer than I had. When I switched trailers to a factory design, towing was smooth and flat.
 

73Vetteman

Member
Joined
May 30, 2015
Posts
54
Reaction score
37
I have found that porpoising is a problem related to the equalizer bars. I suspect you need stiffer rated bars. The trailer and vehicle should move up and down together as a unit over small dips in the road rather than pivot at the trailer ball. Your existing bars were probably adequate for your shorter wheelbase Yukon but the leverage on the bars is increased by the longer wheelbase of your XL.
 
OP
OP
norcalboon

norcalboon

Member
Joined
Jun 9, 2016
Posts
61
Reaction score
60
Update 5/2/21

Front shocks were shot - replaced with the Bilstein 4600s, also replaced the first Timbren’s with the replacement pair they sent. So far much better, will dial in WDH next weekend but feel these 2 items will go along way to fixing the issue. Pics for reference - original shocks vs. replacements and the new vs. old Timbrens. Will complete update after getting the WDH set up and giving it a test drive next weekend. Thanks again for all the input. 3B798AD5-5E24-4733-A1B9-46379EFD370A.jpeg17BF5D47-1C0A-4A3E-9287-70308F96AC27.jpeg7680C642-EA59-4C57-99ED-CEEBA79B128E.jpegA3B8EA98-3861-4670-8F49-1B5C5A4ACC7C.jpeg
 

Forum statistics

Threads
132,324
Posts
1,866,004
Members
96,920
Latest member
BLS9
Top