2008 Chevrolet Suburban Article at Automotive.com
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2008 Chevrolet Suburban 2500

Below is an enthusiast article written by the automotive experts at Truck Trend. There's no badge, no change in bodywork, not even an HD decal to visually separate the 2008 Chevrolet Suburban 2500 from its grocery-getter brethren.
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First Drive: 2008 Chevrolet Suburban 2500

Much More Than Meets the Eye
By G.R. Whale
Photography by Brian Vance
2008 Chevrolet Suburban 2500 Front View

There's no badge, no change in bodywork, not even an HD decal to visually separate the Suburban 2500 from its grocery-getter brethren. Only those clued in to such things will notice the higher rear ride height, smaller-diameter wheels with eight lugs or, if they're sitting low enough, the rear end of a working pickup truck.

Unseen Upgrades
However, under the square yards of Deep Ruby metallic paint, nary a mechanical component has gone untouched. The engine drops Active Fuel Management and gets an iron block for more twist and fewer ponies than the aluminum-block 6.0-liter V-8, yet it sounds identical and pulls to the same 6000 limiter-hence, no redline on the 6000-rpm tach.

An 80-series gearbox adds two gears, raising overall first from the best half-ton's 12.5:1 to almost 15.0:1 with taller overdrive (2.87:1 to 2.50:1) at the other end and a shift toggle on the lever. Despite having fewer ponies and nearly 800 more pounds to get moving than the last 6.0-liter half-ton (with 4.10:1s) we sampled, the six-speed showed its value by getting this very-low-mile unit to 60 mph 0.3 second quicker and through the quarter in the same time but with another 3.5 mph on the dial.

The rearend is a full-floating GM 14-bolt with an overload on the leaf-spring packs and no anti-roll bar; the standard wheels are 16x6.5-inch forged alloys with LT tires. Stuff like this has kept GM pickups hauling for decades, only now with a six-speed auto and variable valve timing.

Brakes
Inside, the rear-suspension architecture changes nothing around rear seats and wheelwells, so the cabin is the same as a 1500 except that you can't get the LTZ trim spec on 3/4-tons. This 1LT, loaded with 2LT and then some, is close to the topmost 2500. It sports four leather buckets and a $100-option three-person vinyl rear bench that split-folds 50/50. For another $1000, the 3LT package would add heated front seats and mirrors and Bose audio.

Responsive analog gauges have the "pure pickup" look set into the LTZ-style single-glovebox dash, nicely melding function and design. There's a space for seemingly everything except the DVD headphones, an issue not unique to GM, and the materials are appropriate for intent and well assembled.

Sub-Mariner
We borrowed a 7400-pound boat/trailer combo for testing and while this is a ton shy of the max tow rating, it's exactly the weight you could tow if the Suburban was fully loaded. On a tri-axle trailer, tongue weight is moderate-it dropped the Sub just 0.75-inch at the hitch, and we bypassed the weight-distribution required by GM for this load in deference to the new boat trailer and lack of Reese SC or Equal-i-zer hardware compatible with surge brakes.


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2008 Chevrolet Suburban