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Guys, thinking about getting one for the wife. She does not like full size trucks, and we are looking at the R Pod camper for her. Until Toyota or Ford adds a diesel in a midsize truck, this seems like the logical choice. I drove a Canyon Denali and was fairly impressed. Mileage is impressive ans 7700 pound towing is plenty for a R Pod. Anyone on the fire running a Canyon or Colorado with the 2.8 duramax. I# so how has the mileage been.......reliability etc. Thanks in advance....Goodshot

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I tried to talk my niece into one of those, but she had her heart set on a JEEP. This site has tested them some. https://www.youtube.com/user/tflcar

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Have you figured in that diesel fuel costs about 20% more than gas? If it costs 20% more to get 10% better mileage, you're losing. Yes, the engine might last longer, but it costs more to buy and to repair. I have a hard time thinking that it's a good deal in smaller vehicles.
However, if you get in OR, you can pump your own diesel.


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Rock Chuck, certainly understand the trafeoffs. Been checking many trailer forums and almost all day pulling a trailer with a v6 drops the mileage on the gas engines a bunch. Plus no question about low end torque etc. of the diesel. I would buy a full size but the wife would also be using this rig everyday and prefers driving a smaller rig. The GM is getting in a 4 x 4 20 mpg city and 28 hwy. I know Ford, Toyota and Nissan all offere vehicles with smaller 2.8 - 3.2 liter displacement diesels in non USA markets. I have owned Ford, Nissan, Ram full size and gas mileage in town is 12-15 mpg. Not sure what the answer is, thanks for the feedback.

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goodshot, you just have to weigh out your options like Rock Chuck said. I know a guy that has a 4x4, Colorado Diesel and he always posts his fuel mileage on Fuelly. His best ever fuel mileage was about 29 MPG on a trip, interstate driving. His average mileage is 23 MPG.

There is this guy that lives in my area that has the V-6 gas burner, Colorado crew cab and he swears that he can get 26 MPG on a trip with it. Not sure about that, some people try to fudge a little from time to time when talking mileage.

Until Chevy, Ford, Toyota gets their act together and puts a small diesel engine in a Colorado sized vehicle or even a half ton, that can get 32 MPG plus I am not interested. Heck the old Chevy Luv or Isuzu diesel from years ago got incredible mileage if I remember correctly, but that was probably at a time with less emission restrictions. I already have a 2006, 4x4, Chevy 2500HD, Duramax so I have the big towing duties covered but I like to have a smaller truck for my daily driver duties. My dad gave me a 2002 S-10, 4.3 V-6 , 4x4 that is my new daily driver. It gets about the same mileage around the house here as the 2500HD, but the big kicker is I can buy fuel for 40 cents cheaper for the S-10, so the 2500HD gets a rest most the time now.

Good luck with your decision.


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A coworker just bought a new Colorado.
If you want a big, little truck it's great.
However, if your goal is a small truck, it too big.


Make sense?


Looking at it in the parking lot, with no other trucks close, you would think it was a full size.


I always thought the older Dakota was a great idea, perfect size for many.
It drank like a big boy, and cost as much.
Might as well have a full size.

I am not a Toyota fanboy, but at least the Taco knows what it is supposed to be.


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Here’s the deal guys. I have a 2013 ram hemi that I drive daily. My wife has a Subaru Forester. I pull a 19 ft boat with my ram, we are getting a small travel trailer that will weigh about 3500 lbs fully loaded. Wife will drive this new rig daily, and the Subaru will go by bye. She prefers suv size rigs, but not many will tow much anymore. Jeep Grand Cherokee is about it. Pricy to say the least and mileage not the greatest. Mid size trucks are ok with her, the Canyon being as large as she is comfortable with.The diesel seemed interesting because of towing and mileage. Seems like the Colorado / Canyon is pushing Ford to get the Ranger going again, Toyota is always strong in this area, Nissan needs to refresh the Frontier, Dakota is no more. We will want to take boat and camper fairly often hence the need for two rigs.

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As Dillonbuck said they are big trucks. Parked next to a Sierra 1500 crew cab they are not a whole lot smaller.

I would sure have her drive both of them. You can probably get a Sierra extended cab for less money.

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Originally Posted by Rock Chuck
Have you figured in that diesel fuel costs about 20% more than gas? If it costs 20% more to get 10% better mileage, you're losing. Yes, the engine might last longer, but it costs more to buy and to repair. I have a hard time thinking that it's a good deal in smaller vehicles.
However, if you get in OR, you can pump your own diesel.

Last August when I ordered my new Colorado ZR2 I was tempted to order the Diesel, price of fuel was not the reason I went with the V6 but how slow the diesel was zero to 60. Until I retire in a 2 years anywhere I go depends on using the crazy freeways out here and I want all the getup and go I can get. Zero to 60 is 9.1 sec with the Diesel which isn’t terrible but the V6's 7.1 sec is sweet.

The stock truck is actually faster that my 68 Chevelle 327 was when it was new and stock it took 7.5 seconds.


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Originally Posted by old_willys
Originally Posted by Rock Chuck
Have you figured in that diesel fuel costs about 20% more than gas? If it costs 20% more to get 10% better mileage, you're losing. Yes, the engine might last longer, but it costs more to buy and to repair. I have a hard time thinking that it's a good deal in smaller vehicles.
However, if you get in OR, you can pump your own diesel.

Last August when I ordered my new Colorado ZR2 I was tempted to order the Diesel, price of fuel was not the reason I went with the V6 but how slow the diesel was zero to 60. Until I retire in a 2 years anywhere I go depends on using the crazy freeways out here and I want all the getup and go I can get. Zero to 60 is 9.1 sec with the Diesel which isn’t terrible but the V6's 7.1 sec is sweet.

The stock truck is actually faster that my 68 Chevelle 327 was when it was new and stock it took 7.5 seconds.



1968 Chevelle with the 327, sweet, now your talking, bringing back some memories from the younger days. Buddy of mine had a 1967 Impala with the 327, but it being such a big lead sled it was not the fastest thing off the line. I learned to drive in a 1969 C-10, 250 CI, inline 6, three on the tree, oh some of the times I had in that truck. Wished I still had it.

Back on topic I have drove a 4X4 GMC, Canyon with the V-6 and it was pretty peppy when I needed it to be, horsepower was 305 or more I think.

Last edited by BIGR; 03/19/18.

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Do these pickup truck sized engines require the additive like the bigger versions?


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As I recall, they all require the use of DEF, but I haven't been taking notes...


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Originally Posted by LouisB
Do these pickup truck sized engines require the additive like the bigger versions?
Not only do they require it but it's the cause of a lot of cussing. The DEF isn't the problem. It's the DEF tank that hangs way down low and is an off-road hazard. It's started a regular industry in developing cages and shields to protect it.


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Not sure that I'd put my money into an engine with VM Motori lineage, but I've got zero firsthand experience with it.

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I think you should pass.
1. Neighbor had one, works for a GM dealership, usually keeps his vehicles two years and trades up. This one lasted a little over a year. (went with a 6.2 gas)
2. Friend bought one who does a lot of traveling. Transmission went out under 20K. He did not do a lot of pulling with it, actually very little. Has a Ranger boat that he pulled for fishing and that is it.

GM is coming out with a diesel in the 1/2 tons for 2019. Inline 6 turbo charged. Supposedly going to get 30 plus mpg. Actual numbers are supposed to released this weekend at an auto show, NY I believe?

Neighbor and I are both going to give them a couple years to see what shakes out. Since he works at the dealership, get real info from him, not just the marketing fluff,

I am researching what to replace my GM 6.2 gas 1/2 ton (average 17.2 mpg over 56K) in a couple of years so I am watching. If I was to buy now, it would be a 1 ton Ram diesel. I know that does not fit your wife's criteria.

I like the idea of a full size 1/2 ton for your needs.

Last edited by CRS; 03/27/18.

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See you live in WA. DEF might be an issue if you go up into the mountains. It gets colder up there and around here and the Dakotas, DEF freezing is a big issue with the newer diesel trucks during the winter months. If you live in an area where the temps get much below freezing for any length of time, it may not start or it may go into limp mode. I'd check on some forums to see if the Chevy/GMC is one of the new ones with the DEF tank heater not being able to properly heat up the fluid in the winter months.

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Loving my 2019 GMC Canyon Denali Baby D-Max totally.

Incredible mileage, hauls like crazy and there is everything to LOVE.

God Bless,

Steve

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Last edited by dogzapper; 03/03/20.

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needs spinners......grin

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Steve's truck......


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I would stay away from the diesel because of the emissions issues. My son is looking to upgrade his 2010 duramax. He said GM dealers can't sell 2015? to 2018? duramax because there is an emission issue GM can't figure out how to fix. My nephew has a 2015 duramax. The emissions were giving him a bunch of problems so he got it deleted. He has more problems with it now than before and the shop that did it can't or wouldn't help him.

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