Small turbodiesel lends lift to GMC Canyon

The 2016 GMC Canyon turbodiesel sits along a gravel road west of Hereford. (Bud Wells)
The 2016 GMC Canyon turbodiesel sits along a gravel road west of Hereford. (Bud Wells)

I fired up the 4-cylinder turbodiesel engine in the 2016 GMC Canyon 4-by-4 pickup Sunday afternoon, May 1, about the time the rain stopped after five days. That power source, new to the Canyon this year, is a 2.8-liter Duramax, built in Thailand.

Jan suggested a quiet drive, somewhere we could get away from heavy traffic; that took us in a northeasterly direction. We ended up in the Grover and Hereford area of northeastern Weld County.

All sorts of driving delights, from well-worn pavement to gravel to short offroad crawls, await motorists up that way. I became acquainted with the area some years back in overseeing the publication of the book, “Northeast Weld County: Homesteading the Dryland,” and more recently in researching the “Wild Horse Jerry” book.

To drive that area is to appreciate a good GMC suspension, which soaks up most bumps. The Canyon uses a coil-over-shock front suspension and a solid rear axle with multileaf springs and twin-tube shocks. Complementing its good handling qualities is a light steering feel associated with a new electric power steering system.

Last fall, I drove a V-6 gasoline-powered Canyon 4-by-4 near Tabernash in the mountains and, similar to the impression with the current one, remarked that it “excelled in grip on the gravel and handled the many curves like a smaller, lighter vehicle.”

The Canyon and near-twin Chevy Colorado are competing head-on with two long-standing, tough compacts, the Toyota Tacoma and Nissan Frontier. Ford abandoned the field with its Ranger several years ago, as did Dodge with its Dakota. Like the full-sizers, sales of the smaller pickups are booming thus far this year. Sales of the Canyon are up 10.6 percent, Colorado has increased 26.2 percent, Frontier 15.9 and Tacoma 13.3.

“The allocation of diesels into the overall Canyon market is expected to be only 10 percent,” said Warren Yoder, owner of Weld County Garage, a GMC dealer. “Though the production numbers are small, the addition of the diesel has stirred lots of inquiries and discussion at our store.”

The Duramax generates only 181 horsepower, though delivers 369 lb.-ft. of torque and is rated to tow up to 7,600 pounds. It is mated to a 6-speed automatic transmission, and a selector dial will engage the transfer case from 2-wheel high to automatic 2/4WD to 4-wheel high to 4-wheel low.

An exhaust brake feature uses engine compression to slow down the pickup, reducing wear and tear on the disc brake system. The Canyon rides on Goodyear Wrangler M&S 265/60R18 tires.

For 300 miles of test driving, the Canyon averaged 25.8 miles per gallon; its EPA estimate is 20/29.

Opting for the Duramax turbodiesel beneath the hood of a new Canyon will boost the price of the pickup by $3,730. The GMC review model, finished in a somewhat odd-color emerald green metallic, was the SLT Crew cab with a base price of $37,450. Adding the diesel tab, an audio upgrade and a couple safety items (forward-collision alert and lane-departure warning) raised sticker price to $44,365.

The short, 5-foot box, with spray-on bedliner, has an easy-drop tailgate and cornersteps in the rear bumper which are so handy for ease of access.

With stitched leather on the seats and dash and color-keyed carpet, the Canyon interior is attractive. Sound-deadening material in the dashboard area has helped quiet the cab.  The rear-seating area is comfortable, though short on legroom.