Payson, AZ is at 4900'. From Phoenix, AZ it is literately uphill both ways. Before you get there you have a 6.5 killer hill. I have blown 1 engine in this area and purchased another 6.5 that blew the engine in this area towing.
Today we borrowed a 1800 LB dump trailer and took a run at this mountain pull.
Round trip was 156 miles with 15 gal used on the nose filled before and after to the curve in the filler neck. 10.4 MPG. Average moving speed was 59 MPH. Towed a 1800LBS 2 axle dump trailer for an extra load. (My 1993 with the GM3 did not do better than 8 MPG and was logged at 7 and 7.5 MPG...) In town economy before I started this venture was 15 MPG - not towing. The pickup with the GM3 would be 13 in town and 14.x freeway.
Bottom line: I slowed down for the corners and nothing else! The mountain pulls did not slow me down. I was at Full Throttle asking for more power only twice, but, over 55 MPH both times. The fan only came on twice the entire trip a vast improvement vs. roaring on every hill the GM3 would do in similar outdoor temps. With the ATT the Suburban does not perform like stock. The biggest improvement is having power all the way to redline instead of the loosing power with higher RPM the GM3 would give me.
Max ECT was 215 and the Kennedy fan kicked out at 180 ECT. (A lower than 195 single T-Stat appears to be required to make the fan work properly. I use a 180.) IAT peak was 270 degrees F.
This engine is a 1986 6.2 complete with 6.2 military heads and precups. The precups had us hit a boost "wall" at 17 PSI no matter what we did with fuel and timing. It simply would not burn more fuel and generate boost with it - it just turned more fuel to smoke. Simply put the NA cups are not big enough. The slightly higher compression, 6.2 injector angle, and larger exhaust valves can also factor in. So a 6.5 set of heads with 6.5 turbo precups will do better. In fact my second 1993 had a rebuilt engine with 6.5 NA precups in it. So sometimes you don't know if someone swapped out a 6.5 turbo with 6.5 NA heads. This is another factor to be reminded of and further proof that the biggest turbo precups you can get are the best for maximum air.
Today we borrowed a 1800 LB dump trailer and took a run at this mountain pull.
Round trip was 156 miles with 15 gal used on the nose filled before and after to the curve in the filler neck. 10.4 MPG. Average moving speed was 59 MPH. Towed a 1800LBS 2 axle dump trailer for an extra load. (My 1993 with the GM3 did not do better than 8 MPG and was logged at 7 and 7.5 MPG...) In town economy before I started this venture was 15 MPG - not towing. The pickup with the GM3 would be 13 in town and 14.x freeway.
Bottom line: I slowed down for the corners and nothing else! The mountain pulls did not slow me down. I was at Full Throttle asking for more power only twice, but, over 55 MPH both times. The fan only came on twice the entire trip a vast improvement vs. roaring on every hill the GM3 would do in similar outdoor temps. With the ATT the Suburban does not perform like stock. The biggest improvement is having power all the way to redline instead of the loosing power with higher RPM the GM3 would give me.
Max ECT was 215 and the Kennedy fan kicked out at 180 ECT. (A lower than 195 single T-Stat appears to be required to make the fan work properly. I use a 180.) IAT peak was 270 degrees F.
This engine is a 1986 6.2 complete with 6.2 military heads and precups. The precups had us hit a boost "wall" at 17 PSI no matter what we did with fuel and timing. It simply would not burn more fuel and generate boost with it - it just turned more fuel to smoke. Simply put the NA cups are not big enough. The slightly higher compression, 6.2 injector angle, and larger exhaust valves can also factor in. So a 6.5 set of heads with 6.5 turbo precups will do better. In fact my second 1993 had a rebuilt engine with 6.5 NA precups in it. So sometimes you don't know if someone swapped out a 6.5 turbo with 6.5 NA heads. This is another factor to be reminded of and further proof that the biggest turbo precups you can get are the best for maximum air.