GMC Sierra 1500: 2016 Motor Trend Truck of the Year Finalist

Updated Sierra Adds Eight-Speed Auto Availability

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We Like: The guttural exhaust note, e­ffortless hauling, seamless shifts.

We Don't Like: The nose-heavy handling, flinty ride, missed opportunities.

Like the Silverado, the Sierra was invited because it received GM's new Hydramatic 8L90 eight-speed transmission, available on higher trim levels with the 5.3-liter V-8 and standard with the 6.2-liter. Two extra cogs paired with the larger V-8 proved to be a strong combination around town, while towing and hauling, and against our engineering excellence criterion.

Learn about other Truck of the Year finalists at the links below. Check out theTruck of the Year introduction HERE, and discoverhow our Of The Year awards have evolved HERE.Andthe 2016 Motor Trend Truck of the Year is...

"Want to haul ass while hauling?" Christian Seabaugh asked. "The Sierra Denali is the way to do it. Easily the fastest ride up and down the dam grade so far today. The 50-70-mph acceleration test felt as if the truck was empty—no struggle whatsoever despite the 1,000 pounds of mats."

The unloaded truck marched from 0-60 mph in an easy 5.8 seconds and needed just 14.9 while pulling its maximum 9,100-pound trailer weight. The percentage delta was the smallest of this Truck of the Year event.

Brian Vance found the shifts seamless. "Running up and down the gearset is a pleasure," he said. A pleasure for the ears, too, though at least one editor found the exhaust note a tad Just For Men. "There seems to be an intentional roar to the exhaust that seems a bit contrived," Kim Reynolds said. "But I guess that's part of the show you're paying for."

It's no surprise that every judge's Sierra notes referenced its platform twin, the Chevrolet Silverado. What was surprising is how nearly everyone preferred the ride and handling of the Silverado's conventional Z71 monotube shocks to the response of the Sierra's magnetic fluid dampers. We thought the refreshed styling made an already handsome truck look even better.

Sierra scored on design, engineering excellence, and efficiency, but is there enough to score our brand-new Truck of the Year trophy?

2016 GMC Sierra Denali 4x4

BASE PRICE

$54,760

PRICE AS TESTED

$60,465

VEHICLE LAYOUT

Front-engine, 4WD, 5-pass, 4-door truck

ENGINE

6.2L/420-hp/460-lb-ft OHV 16-valve V-8*

TRANSMISSION

8-speed automatic

LENGTH x WIDTH x HEIGHT

229.3 x 80.0 x 74.0 in

WHEELBASE

143.5 in

CURB WEIGHT (F/R DIST)

5,733 lb (58/42%)

ACCELERATION, 0-60 MPH**

5.8; 13.3; 14.9 sec

QUARTER MILE**

14.2 sec @ 97.1 mph; 19.5 sec @ 71.8 mph; 20.3 sec @ 70.2 mph

DAVIS DAM "FRUSTRATION"***

5.9 sec, 506 ft

BRAKING, 60-0 MPH

129 ft

LATERAL ACCELERATION

0.76 g (avg)

MT FIGURE EIGHT

27.8 sec @ 0.63 g (avg)

EPA CITY/HWY/COMB FUEL ECON

15/21/17 mpg

ENERGY CONS., CITY/HWY

225/160 kW-hrs/100 miles

CO2 EMISSIONS, COMB

1.13 lb/mile

REAL MPG, CITY/HWY/COMB

15/21/18

*SAE Certified

**Unladen; towing 7,000-lb trailer; towing 9,100-lb trailer

***50-70-mph passing acceleration with 1000 pounds of payload

I used to go kick tires with my dad at local car dealerships. I was the kid quizzing the sales guys on horsepower and 0-60 times, while Dad wandered around undisturbed. When the salesmen finally cornered him, I'd grab as much of the glossy product literature as I could carry. One that still stands out to this day: the beautiful booklet on the Mitsubishi Eclipse GSX that favorably compared it to the Porsches of the era. I would pore over the prose, pictures, specs, trim levels, even the fine print, never once thinking that I might someday be responsible for the asterisked figures "*as tested by Motor Trend magazine." My parents, immigrants from Hong Kong, worked their way from St. Louis, Missouri (where I was born) to sunny Camarillo, California, in the early 1970s. Along the way, Dad managed to get us into some interesting, iconic family vehicles, including a 1973 Super Beetle (first year of the curved windshield!), 1976 Volvo 240, the 1977 Chevrolet Caprice Classic station wagon, and 1984 VW Vanagon. Dad imbued a love of sports cars and fast sedans as well. I remember sitting on the package shelf of his 1981 Mazda RX-7, listening to him explain to my Mom - for Nth time - what made the rotary engine so special. I remember bracing myself for the laggy whoosh of his turbo diesel Mercedes-Benz 300D, and later, his '87 Porsche Turbo. We were a Toyota family in my coming-of-age years. At 15 years and 6 months, I scored 100 percent on my driving license test, behind the wheel of Mom's 1991 Toyota Previa. As a reward, I was handed the keys to my brother's 1986 Celica GT-S. Six months and three speeding tickets later, I was booted off the family insurance policy and into a 1983 Toyota 4x4 (Hilux, baby). It took me through the rest of college and most of my time at USC, where I worked for the Daily Trojan newspaper and graduated with a biology degree and business minor. Cars took a back seat during my stint as a science teacher for Teach for America. I considered a third year of teaching high school science, coaching volleyball, and helping out with the newspaper and yearbook, but after two years of telling teenagers to follow their dreams, when I wasn't following mine, I decided to pursue a career in freelance photography. After starving for 6 months, I was picked up by a tiny tuning magazine in Orange County that was covering "The Fast and the Furious" subculture years before it went mainstream. I went from photographer-for-hire to editor-in-chief in three years, and rewarded myself with a clapped-out 1989 Nissan 240SX. I subsequently picked up a 1985 Toyota Land Cruiser (FJ60) to haul parts and camera gear. Both vehicles took me to a more mainstream car magazine, where I first sipped from the firehose of press cars. Soon after, the Land Cruiser was abandoned. After a short stint there, I became editor-in-chief of the now-defunct Sport Compact Car just after turning 30. My editorial director at the time was some long-haired dude with a funny accent named Angus MacKenzie. After 18 months learning from the best, Angus asked me to join Motor Trend as senior editor. That was in 2007, and I've loved every second ever since.

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