2014 GMC Sierra 1500 6.2L 4x4 
 When the grille on a 2014 Sierra Denali pickup
 first looms in your rearview mirror, you’re going to wonder one thing: 
Why is a chrome fireplace enclosure chasing me down the street? Okay, 
maybe you won’t wonder that. We did, but we must admit to aberrant 
architectural musings when confronted by square-shouldered rigs like 
this GMC pickup.
So here’s something more automotive to ponder while you dim the rearview
 mirror to dowse the glare off the chrome: Did the driver shell out the 
extra $1995 to get the 6.2-liter V-8 engine upgrade from the standard 
5.3? Because if he did, and he’s clever enough to engage four-wheel 
drive via the knob on the left side of the dashboard to make sure all 
420 horsepower gets to the ground, that Denali—the trim that we 
tested—can be moving one mile per minute in 5.4 seconds, on its way to a
 14.1-second quarter-mile at 99 mph. Those numbers would match up nicely
 with sports sedans like the Cadillac ATS and be more than sufficient to surprise the occasional pony car when the traffic signal turns green.
Not a bad trick for only two grand more, a small bump relative to the 
ordinary 6.2-liter-optioned Sierra 4x4 SLT crew cab’s $48,100 price. Our
 wicked black Denali test truck started at $51,060 and had a few other 
options, including a $495 Driver Alert package (lane-departure warning, 
forward-collision alert, and a driver’s seat that vibrates to get your 
attention), a $995 glass sunroof, and a $230 trailer-brake controller, 
bringing the as-tested price to $54,730, or not quite $10 per pound.
Since our Sierra Denali test truck weighed in at 5672 pounds and has the
 drag coefficient of, well, a fireplace enclosure, the quarter-mile 
sprint is pretty much the story on the performance front. It gets to 100
 mph in 14.5, and holding the pedal to the carpet for four more seconds 
takes it to its 110-mph terminal velocity. Thanks to four-wheel drive, 
at least one of our testers reported “playing rally driver” on dirt 
roads while avoiding crash-congested highways after a late-winter snow, 
but neither the steering nor the brakes really invite such adventuring; 
it’s still about the engine.
The “Corvette Engine”
Truck people refer to this 6.2-liter V-8 as the “Corvette engine,” with 
no lack of encouragement from GM marketers happy to highlight the 
similarities. This strikes us as a little backward because, since 
forever, Corvettes have both benefited and been derided by sports-car 
purists for having highly tuned pushrod truck engines. Sharing the 
engineering and manufacturing costs across the mass-produced truck 
versions is what helps make a Corvette
 one of the world’s great performance bargains. Call it what you will, 
this latest 6.2-liter small-block, tuned here to deliver torque earlier 
and to cost less to build than a real Corvette engine, is gutsy and 
smooth and mates well with the six-speed automatic. We almost said the 
engine was quiet, too, but it’s notably louder if you stand outside, out
 of reach of the standard noise-cancellation technology in the cabin.
Another modern enhancement, cylinder deactivation, turns the V-8 into a 
V-4 under light loads to conserve fuel. The transitions between modes 
are smooth and barely noticeable. The driver-information center in the 
instrument panel has an indicator light—pay attention to the light for a
 while, and it’ll train your fingers and ears to detect the difference 
(there’s a slight increase in coarseness in V-4 mode). It might also 
train your right foot to tread lightly enough to get better fuel economy
 than the 14 mpg we observed, smack dab on top of the EPA city estimate.
 By the way, premium-grade fuel is recommended but not required