Yukon XL towing capacity: 3.73 vs 4.10

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Bart Hinder

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I've been lurking here for a while now and I've learned a lot from this forum without having to ask any questions. Now I have one.
I bought a 2004 Yukon XL 2500 4x4 8.1L with the tow/haul package back in October to do some serious towing for my future side gig. (Skid steer + forestry mulcher). It's got the 3.73 rear end.
Rated towing capacity per the owner's manual:
3.73 10,000 lbs
4.10 12,000 lbs
The weight distributing hitch is rated for 12k lbs. And my ball mount is rated for 16k lbs.
So what's the worst that can happen if I try to tow say, 11,000 lbs?
Burn more gas? Can't pass a Prius? Little more strain on the engine?
From what I've been reading, I don't see where the 4.10 gear ratio imparts any additional physical strength to the truck. But I am open to upgrading to the 4.10 in the future.
 

Scottydoggs

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i used to tow my 24 foot boat that weighed in at 4500 dry. my 03 2500 hd with 4.10 gears came off a dead stop like i was towing nothing. hardly knew it was back there.

no joke here, but two of my friends that came out fishing with me had trucks, one a ford, the other a dodge, both had trouble compared to my truck power wise. we'd take turns towing it to the water.
 
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Bart Hinder

Bart Hinder

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Thanks for responding. My concern is that I'm renting a Bobcat next week that weighs 8200 lbs. The trailer weighs probably 3000 lbs. Is 11,200 lbs a cause for concern?
 

Scottydoggs

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i dragged a few bob cats around with it too. those are real dead weight lol 4.10 did it with ease.

if its just a short distance id not worry to much. get the load centered over the trailer wheels as to not carry to much on the ass of the truck, coil springs dont hold weight like a leaf spring will.
 

swathdiver

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I've been lurking here for a while now and I've learned a lot from this forum without having to ask any questions. Now I have one.
I bought a 2004 Yukon XL 2500 4x4 8.1L with the tow/haul package back in October to do some serious towing for my future side gig. (Skid steer + forestry mulcher). It's got the 3.73 rear end.
Rated towing capacity per the owner's manual:
3.73 10,000 lbs
4.10 12,000 lbs
The weight distributing hitch is rated for 12k lbs. And my ball mount is rated for 16k lbs.
So what's the worst that can happen if I try to tow say, 11,000 lbs?
Burn more gas? Can't pass a Prius? Little more strain on the engine?
From what I've been reading, I don't see where the 4.10 gear ratio imparts any additional physical strength to the truck. But I am open to upgrading to the 4.10 in the future.

Mechanically she can handle it. The 4.10s make it a lot easier to hold rpms at speed with all that weight. But I do not know what can slow an 8.1 down!
 
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Bart Hinder

Bart Hinder

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Thanks. I'm open to suspension mods also, if anyone has recommendations.

We love our '03 Tahoe, but I've been ******* after the GMC badge for years.
 

intheburbs

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Just do it. You're not going to break anything. The 2500s are total tanks and completely overbuilt.

I would say just make sure you leave it in third gear, which is a 1:1 ratio, to minimize stress on the transmission. That's most likely the reason for the lower towing rating. Just lock out 4th, overdrive.

ETA: Instead of re-gearing in the future, if it was me, I'd look into upgrading the transmission to the Allison. You'd need to lift the body an inch or an inch and a half to clear the bell housing, but that would be a substantial upgrade. Should be pretty easy to find a junkyard transmission, there were hundreds of thousands of 2000-2006 HD pickup trucks built with the 8.1 and the Allison. But the SUVs didn't get the Allison, they got the 4L80/85.

Advantages of the Allison are an extra gear (it's a five speed), better ratios in lower gears to get you going with heavier loads, and grade braking.
 
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CountryBoy19

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I don't see where the 4.10 gear ratio imparts any additional physical strength to the truck. But I am open to upgrading to the 4.10 in the future.
For a given grade (hill) or given acceleration rate, a 4.10 ratio means less torque on the engine/transmission.

IE, if everything else is the same (same hill, same speed up the hill, same load on the vehicle/trailer) it takes the exact same torque AT THE WHEEL. But the 4.10 ratio multiplies the driveshaft torque 10% more than with the 3.73. So for an equal torque at the wheel, your transmission, engine, and driveshaft is seeing only 90% of the torque.

That is the physical difference. Everything else is the same: A 12k lb trailer on the back doesn't change frame stresses etc, it's all in the drive-line torque.

Considering rated tow capacities are very conservative, you should be ok towing a load over rated capacity as long as you're thoughtful about it.

When GM rates vehicles for tow capacity they have to keep in mind that people are going to try to hook that capacity trailer up tow it down the interstate in the mountains. If you're not doing interstate, nor mountains, you should be able to exceed rated capacity by a large margin. Even if you are doing it in the mountains, just use a lower gear and keep an eye on transmission temp.
 

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