Made a trip with the in-laws to the southern edge of the Smoky's this past week. We followed my FIL as he towed his 43' MobileScout toy hauler with his 2006 Chevy 3500. There were anywhere from 6-10% grades throughout the the last leg.
I had always thought the Duramax as a fairly decent engine, but all of my experience has been on relatively flat terrain.
That thing was a dog on every steep grade it pulled. Now, I know they've changed it up since that MY, but the changes haven't been that drastic from what I gather.
I don't know if he doesn't really know how to drive it (he claims it has an OEM exhaust brake, and it doesn't) or what, but it was not anything like the magazines "claim. "
On the way home, it was around 105 degrees and his alarms in his truck went ape**** as his transmission hit 300 degrees from the ups and downs.
Yet he continues to say he won't buy a Ram because "it falls apart" around the power train.
Duradud is a fitting term.
I had always thought the Duramax as a fairly decent engine, but all of my experience has been on relatively flat terrain.
That thing was a dog on every steep grade it pulled. Now, I know they've changed it up since that MY, but the changes haven't been that drastic from what I gather.
I don't know if he doesn't really know how to drive it (he claims it has an OEM exhaust brake, and it doesn't) or what, but it was not anything like the magazines "claim. "
On the way home, it was around 105 degrees and his alarms in his truck went ape**** as his transmission hit 300 degrees from the ups and downs.
Yet he continues to say he won't buy a Ram because "it falls apart" around the power train.

Duradud is a fitting term.