Rare Rides: The 2003 GMC Yukon 2500 XL, a Quadrasteer Experience

Corey Lewis
by Corey Lewis

Today’s Rare Ride coverage was prompted when your author saw an unusual pickup truck on the roads of Cincinnati. The truck in question was a black Sierra Denali from the early 2000s, with a telltale feature on its rear fenders: little lights on either side. Let’s talk Quadrasteer.

Quadrasteer was developed at Delphi Automotive Systems in the late Nineties. An Irish company, Delphi was founded in 1994 as Automotive Components Group but changed its name to Delphi shortly thereafter. A provider of vehicular electrics, modules, and other components, General Motors contracted with Delphi to create a new four-wheel steering system for its full-size trucks.

While other manufacturers had used four-wheel steering in production vehicles in past, most of those systems were implemented on coupes or sedans to assist with high-speed handling. The old Honda Prelude 4WS comes to mind, and Infiniti used Nissan’s HICAS four-wheel steering system on the original Q45.

With Quadrasteer, GM wanted to enable tighter turns on its trucks – a feature intended to appeal to owners who towed large things. At low speeds, trucks with Quadrasteer could turn their rear wheels up to 15 degrees in the opposite direction of the front ones. With the truck in towing mode, that figure was reduced to 12 degrees. Quadrasteer was effective and reduced the turning radius on trucks up to 21 percent. The system worked at higher speeds as well and turned the rear wheels to a lesser degree than at low speeds, in the same direction as the front. Trucks equipped with Quadrasteer were obvious upon visual inspection given wider rear fenders that were legally required to have their own marker lights. The rear axle on Quadrasteer was based on the Dana 60.

GM limited the availability of Quadrasteer to its 2500 models, and the system debuted in 2002. At that point, the very popular GMT 800 trucks were in their second model year. Quadrasteer was offered on the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra 2500s, as well as their counterpart Suburban and Yukon XLs. Quadrasteer was not limited to Denali trim, but on the Sierra, that’s where it was most often optioned.

That choice made sense when one considered Quadrasteer pricing; it wasn’t cheap. Initially, the system asked $7,000, but almost immediately GM realized it aimed a bit too high. Pricing was cut to $5,600, then $2,000, and finally just $1,000 at the end of Quadrasteer’s life before it was dropped. It was offered through the end of the GMT 800 generation in 2005. Probably for the best, as at the same time Delphi disclosed some interesting accounting practices it used, which led to an almost immediate Chapter 11 bankruptcy. But that’s some Abandoned History for another day.

Today’s Rare Ride is a Yukon XL 2500 in SLT trim, with Quadrasteer. In decent condition (with rebuilt title!) it sold earlier this year for $9,500.

[Images: YouTube]

Corey Lewis
Corey Lewis

Interested in lots of cars and their various historical contexts. Started writing articles for TTAC in late 2016, when my first posts were QOTDs. From there I started a few new series like Rare Rides, Buy/Drive/Burn, Abandoned History, and most recently Rare Rides Icons. Operating from a home base in Cincinnati, Ohio, a relative auto journalist dead zone. Many of my articles are prompted by something I'll see on social media that sparks my interest and causes me to research. Finding articles and information from the early days of the internet and beyond that covers the little details lost to time: trim packages, color and wheel choices, interior fabrics. Beyond those, I'm fascinated by automotive industry experiments, both failures and successes. Lately I've taken an interest in AI, and generating "what if" type images for car models long dead. Reincarnating a modern Toyota Paseo, Lincoln Mark IX, or Isuzu Trooper through a text prompt is fun. Fun to post them on Twitter too, and watch people overreact. To that end, the social media I use most is Twitter, @CoreyLewis86. I also contribute pieces for Forbes Wheels and Forbes Home.

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  • Jim Jim on Sep 13, 2023

    QS is awesome. I have a 2005 Tahoe XL 2500 QS with the 6l engine and 265000km thus far. It is fast and comfortable for long highway trips, and on one lane forest roads, I can turn around in less than the vehicle length. In the city, I can get into parking spaces that nobody watching can believe. Backing up trailers is now easy. I love my QS.

  • Ray Ray on Feb 19, 2024

    I love my QS when it worked and my shocks were new it would be great do you know about the mechanics on the rear steering on the axle

  • Jeanbaptiste 2022 Tesla model 3 performance ~35000 miles tires - ~$1000ish. Several cabin filters ~$50
  • El scotto No rag-top, no rag-top(s) = not a prestigious car brand. Think it through. All of the high-end Germans and Lexus have rag-tops. Corvette is really its own brand.World-leading engines. AMG, M, S and well Lexus is third-world tough. GM makes one of the best V-8s in the world in Bowling Green. But nooooo, noooo, we're GM only Corvettes get Corvette engines. Balderdash! I say. Put Corvette engines in the top-tier Cadillacs. I know GM could make a world-class 3.5 liter V-6 but they don't or won't. In the interior everything that gets touched, including your butt, has to feel good. No exceptions.Some think that those who pay above MSRP and brag about it are idiots. Go the opposite direction, and offer an extended 10-year 100,000-mile factory warranty. At a reasonable price. That's Acura's current business model.
  • Carrera 2014 Toyota Corolla with 192,000 miles bought new. Oil changes every 5,000 miles, 1 coolant flush, and a bunch of air filters and in cabin air filters, and wipers. On my 4th set of tires.Original brake pads ( manual transmission), original spark plugs. Nothing else...it's a Toyota. Did most of oil changes either free at Toyota or myself. Also 3 batteries.2022 Acura TLX A-Spec AWD 13,000 miles now but bought new.Two oil changes...2006 Hyundai Elantra gifted from a colleague with 318,000 when I got it, and 335,000 now. It needed some TLC. A set of cheap Chinese tires ($275), AC compressor, evaporator, expansion valve package ( $290) , two TYC headlights $120, one battery ( $95), two oil changes, air filters, Denso alternator ( $185), coolant, and labor for AC job ( $200).
  • Mike-NB2 This is a mostly uninformed vote, but I'll go with the Mazda 3 too.I haven't driven a new Civic, so I can't say anything about it, but two weeks ago I had a 2023 Corolla as a rental. While I can understand why so many people buy these, I was surprised at how bad the CVT is. Many rentals I've driven have a CVT and while I know it has one and can tell, they aren't usually too bad. I'd never own a car with a CVT, but I can live with one as a rental. But the Corolla's CVT was terrible. It was like it screamed "CVT!" the whole time. On the highway with cruise control on, I could feel it adjusting to track the set speed. Passing on the highway (two-lane) was risky. The engine isn't under-powered, but the CVT makes it seem that way.A minor complaint is about the steering. It's waaaay over-assisted. At low speeds, it's like a 70s LTD with one-finger effort. Maybe that's deliberate though, given the Corolla's demographic.
  • Mike-NB2 2019 Ranger - 30,000 miles / 50,000 km. Nothing but oil changes. Original tires are being replaced a week from Wednesday. (Not all that mileage is on the original A/S tires. I put dedicated winter rims/tires on it every winter.)2024 - Golf R - 1700 miles / 2800 km. Not really broken in yet. Nothing but gas in the tank.
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