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I have a 2016 5.3 (6L80) Tahoe and a 2019 6.2 (10L80) Yukon. The 6.2 is faster and is shifts very smooth. Very fun to drive. However, the 6.2 recommends premium fuel. The 5.3 is has plenty of power and is better on gas mileage. I don't know if all 5.3s had the 6 speed transmission, but I would avoid the 8 speed. I should note that the 2018-2020 10L80 transmissions in these SUVs are Gen 1 and are very different than the newer Gen 2 10 speeds with all the recalls. These Gen 1's are almost identical to the early Ford 10R80s with some improvements. GM went with the Gen 2's in 2019 for the trucks and in 2021 for the SUVs.i’m on the hunt for a 2016-2020 tahoe. should i get the 5.3 or the 6.2? give me all the info about both, especially reliability. will occasionally pull a smaller boat, jet skis, or a polaris rzr.
95% of the time you would never notice a difference.6.2 = more smiles per gallon! I only use 93 octane!
The 2018-2020 6.2 10 speed is the best of all of them. I would immediately change oil with 5w30 Dexos 1 gen 3 Castrol oil edge and oem filter. 30k transmission service and if you tow allot 20k.I have a 2020 LS with the 5.3, w/ trailering gears. It has plenty of power to tow my 8K# travel trailer. I was under the impression that th10 speed tranny paired to the 6.2L was problematic?
I went with 0W40 in my 2019 Yukon Denali's L86 like the L87's oil viscosity change. My last two Vetts (C6 Z06 and C8 Z51) used it also. FWIW, I have no existing warranty on the Yukon. It gives me a small amount of gratuitous oil pressure increase and a 30% greater oil shear strength over the 0W20. The increased shear was what I was looking for as it minimizes the chance of any bearing to crank journal contact.The 2018-2020 6.2 10 speed is the best of all of them. I would immediately change oil with 5w30 Dexos 1 gen 3 Castrol oil edge and oem filter. 30k transmission service and if you tow allot 20k.
Have someone scan your engine cal with HP tuners. Your high pressure circuit may be disabled for AFM. If you delete that AFM you can enable it around 3000rpm and you will get about 60-65psi above 3k rpm. My L83 had it shut off. Oil piston squirters also work above 43psi so double benefits.I went with 0W40 in my 2019 Yukon Denali's L86 like the L87's oil viscosity change. My last two Vetts (C6 Z06 and C8 Z51) used it also. FWIW, I have no existing warranty on the Yukon. It gives me a small amount of gratuitous oil pressure increase and a 30% greater oil shear strength over the 0W20. The increased shear was what I was looking for as it minimizes the chance of any bearing to crank journal contact.
I noticed the lag in a 2015 Tahoe I drove, especially compared to my 2010 Tahoe. They must have improved the throttle mapping as my 2019 Yukon does not have that issue.I've always beem happy with the 5.3 although the later year ones are a bit laggy off the line. A lot of people have said it's the tuning.
My old 04 was similar in speed to the bigger engine, didn't need premium and had proper 4x4.. which isn't an issue since they don't stick you with AWD anymore with the bigger one.