The Toyota HiLux could this year become the first ute to claim the title of Australiaâs best-selling vehicle. Itâs famously and successfully marketed as âunbreakableâ, but while that could also be applied to its stranglehold on its segment, this is a boom time for all utilities.
They account for an eighth of Australiaâs new car market, and are growing. In 2009 utes were the second most popular vehicle segment after small cars; to date in 2013 4Ã4 models donât even need their 4Ã2 twins to achieve such status.
Dual-cabs are chiefly responsible for the rise of the ute. With their increasingly accommodating rear seats and consistently versatile traybacks, these big utes â" dubbed âOne tonnersâ due to their payload capabilities â" have become the choice for tradies who see a vehicle that they can use as a workhorse during the week and as a family hauler at weekends.
They also have huge appeal as an alternative lifestyle vehicle to an SUV. Manufacturers have belatedly seized on this trend to make todayâs utes better suited to this dual-purpose role. Thereâs no greater example than safety, an area where utes have historically been poor.
In 2009, the safest utes still achieved only four out of five stars in independent crash testing, and the most you could expect as standard were anti-lock brakes and a couple of airbags. The majority of the newest utes, however, are five-star performers and offer six airbags that also help to protect occupants in the rear.
Those models comprise the Ford Ranger, Mazda BT-50, Volkswagen Amarok and Holden Colorado that feature as part of this comparison â" along with the equally new Isuzu D-Max that just missed out on a five-star rating.
Lifecycles for utes are much longer than your average passenger car or SUV, so the current Toyota HiLux, Nissan Navara (both out since 2005) and Mitsubishi Triton (since 2006) are in their twilight years but their huge popularity demands their inclusion here. (All-new Navara and Triton models are expected in 2014, with a next-generation HiLux at least another year away.)
To help CarAdvice find out which dual-cab ute is best, we enlisted the help of two builders who use utes on a daily basis. Paul Dermatis and Dean Pizzol are both builder project managers who are based in Sydney.
PRICE AND VALUE
Dual-cab utes donât come cheap, but buyers are getting at least 5.2 metres of metal for the money. These are big vehicles (though still dwarfed by the likes of the American Ford F-150).
All ute ranges are extensive, including multiple offerings of dual or crew cab models in addition to cab-chassis and space-cab styles.
Our eight utes pivot around the $50,000 mark, with only a couple below that and most above by up to several thousand dollars. All have cheaper models below the grades we have tested here.
A couple of anomalies arise due to press car availability: the Mazda BT-50 is the only model present with a manual rather than automatic gearbox; the Nissan Navara STX550 costs from $63,390 where we would have chosen the $57,290 STX â" but they are mechanically identical.
Varying price and model line-ups also mean some top their respective ranges while others are one grade below.
Feature commonalities to all eight utes are 17-inch alloy wheels, foglights, cloth seats, cruise control, trip computer, leather steering wheel and side steps and rear step. All have Bluetooth connectivity, though the Colorado, D-Max and Navara donât offer the contemporary audio streaming feature.
The Isuzu D-Max LS-U is the most affordable in the group at a starting price of $45,500 ($47,700 auto as tested). It doesnât offer many key features beyond the aforementioned list, though, and its air-conditioning system is basic where the rest are either climate control or dual-zone climate (Ranger, BT-50, Navara).
Itâs near-identical twin, the Holden Colorado that was also released in 2012, costs from $49,990 ($51,990 auto) and justifies some of that gap with extra features including the only standard tonneau cover in the group (soft standard but an optional $2500 hard cover was fitted to our test car).
Colorado is among five utes here to fit sports bars to the tray, joining the Navara STX, $45,740 ($48,240 auto) Triton GLX-R, auto-only $53,990 Amarok Highline, and Ranger XLT that costs from $53,390 ($55,390 auto).
The Ford Ranger and Mazda BT-50 are the other set of twins in this comparison, built in Thailand but with engineering and development led by Ford Australia.
Thereâs a $4500 drop from the Ranger XLT to the $48,890 BT-50 XTR ($50,890 auto), some of which is offset by extra equipment. The Mazda adds satellite navigation but the Ford counters with an array of extras that include sports bar, auto headlights, auto-dimming rear view mirror, tow bar, rear parking sensors, privacy glass, heated side mirrors, and rain-sensing wipers that are also exclusive in this test.
Privacy glass is also offered on the Navara STX and Triton GLX-R. The $50,990 ($53,490 auto) Toyota HiLux is the only other model to include sat-nav as standard (unless paying extra for the STX550), while it also has auto lights and is the only one with a DVD player.
The Amarok matches the Rangerâs heated side mirrors and rear sensors, though is the only ute on test with auto windows all round and a steering wheel that adjusts for reach and not just height. The BT-50 follows all Mazda vehicles with no-cost metallic paint availability.
Mazda is the most miserly with its warranty, though, with just two years/100,000km. (The company will bump up the warranty to the latter if the BT-50 is driven less than 100,000km after two years.)
Volkswagen gets positive marks for making its warranty three years regardless of mileage, but Isuzu and Mitsubishi offer the greatest piece of mind with five-year warranties â" though the D-Maxâs covers up to 130,000km where the Triton is up to 100,000km. All other models come with three-year/100,000km coverage.
RUNNING COSTS
Fuel economy is covered under our Engines & Performance section, so here weâre focused on the biggest running cost (resale) and servicing. For residual values, we looked at Glass Guideâs worst-case forecasts for each vehicle after three years and 60,000km.
Five utes sat around the 48 per cent (Ranger, Navara, Amarok) and 47 per cent (D-Max, BT-50) marks.
The Colorado is predicted to lose the most value over the period, worth just 44 per cent of its new-car price. And perhaps predictably, itâs the highly reputable HiLux that sits at the top for resale, with 51 per cent, though the Triton matches it.
Six of the eight brands offer capped-price servicing to provide convenient transparency for buyers, though costs still vary greatly between Ford, Holden, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Toyota and Volkswagen.
The HiLux is the cheapest ute to service, with Toyota charging $170 for each of six services. A total cost of $1020 over three years is most closely matched by the Colorado ($1180) though thatâs for five services only (including an initial complimentary service).
Ford, Mitsubishi and Volkswagen stretch their servicing out over four years at every 15,000km. The Amarok is next cheapest at $1933, followed by the Triton ($1950) then the Ranger ($2095), while Nissan has the highest capped price servicing by some margin, with the Navara needing $2867.17 to be looked after over three years.
Isuzu and Mazda, the only brands not to offer CPS, are in the same ballpark. The D-Max LS-U costs $2625 with an average service cost of $375, but offers the largest number of services (seven) â" which Isuzu says is important for vehicles typically operating in a hard-working environment. It also argues its services include air-con pollen filter replacement that would cost an extra $150 per service for its twin, the Colorado.
Mazdaâs BT-50 is only about $27 short of costing $1000 per year for servicing, with a total recommended servicing cost of $2919.24 over three years.
ENGINES: TORQUE AND TOWING
Turbo diesel power rules the ute roost, for the pulling power advantage these torque-biased engines holds over petrol.
If youâre buying a ute purely on torque output, the Nissan Navara STX is the clear pick. Its 3.0-litre V6 produces 550Nm â" 17 per cent more torque than the next strongest engines, the 470Nm 3.2-litre five-cylinder found in the Ford Ranger and Mazda BT-50, and the 2.8-litre four-cylinder in the Holden Colorado.
Itâs also the most powerful, with 170kW, though the impressive numbers donât equate to towing bragging rights. For braked towing capacity, the Navara sits at a segment average of 3000kg alongside D-Max, Triton and Amarok, all of which are 500kg shy of the class-leading Ranger, BT-50 and Colorado.
The D-Max, although related to the Colorado, also continues with a (modified, 380Nm) 3.0-litre four-cylinder, as does the HiLux. The Toyota has the least amount of torque (343Nm) but at least delivers peak torque from the lowest point in the rev range here â" 1400 to 3400rpm.
The Triton has the second smallest engine â" a 2.5-litre four-cylinder â" and the second lowest torque output in auto form: 350Nm at 1800rpm.
Volkswagenâs Amarok TDI420 has just a 2.0-litre four-cylinder, but it employs two turbochargers to produce a healthy 420Nm.
The German ute takes a different route in other ways, too. Itâs the only model in the group with an eight-speed auto, compared with a seven-speeder for the Navara STX, six-speeders for the Ranger, BT-50 and Colorado, five-speeders for D-Max and Triton, and just a four-ratio auto for the HiLux.
Amarok also stands out with permanent all-wheel drive (dubbed 4Motion), where the rest are rear-wheel drive with part-time four-wheel drive â" selected either electrically by dials or mechanically via secondary levers depending on model.
Triton has selectable all-wheel drive for all surfaces including the bitumen, though the rest of the group are rear-wheel-drivers with selectable high range (4H for higher-speed off-roading) or low range (for trickier, low-speed off-roading).
Ranger and BT-50 include lockable rear differentials as standard, which are optional on the Amarok and Triton.
ENGINES: PERFORMANCE
The Volkswagen drivetrain is a standout for other reasons, because itâs by far the slickest found in its class. It comes closer than any of the diesels on test to mimicking a petrol engine in the way it sounds and revs. Thereâs still some diesel clatter but not to the extent heard in all other engines.
Smoothness is aided by the smart-shifting eight-speed auto that reacts quickly to changes in gradients, downshifts adeptly under hard braking, and upshifts quickly to exploit the maximum torque that kicks in at 1750rpm. If youâre in a sportier mood, use the tipshift to hold gears because this is a diesel engine that will rev eagerly towards a 5000rpm redline.
The Ranger and BT-50 five-cylinder â" with its slightly offbeat diesel note â" doesnât have such a good top end, but itâs decent down low and has a particular sweet spot between 2000 and 3500rpm. This was especially noticeable using the six-speed manual of the BT-50, which also proved to be quicker than the auto Ranger in CarAdviceâs performance tests.
The Mazda took 8.0 seconds to go from 80-120km/h in fourth gear compared with 9.3 seconds for the Ford.
Ford, however, did give us a brand new Ranger that initially had just 50km on the odo, and thereâs no doubt its all-round performance was hampered by an engine that had yet to loosen up.
Still, shifting quickly in manual diesels is a challenge and the Ranger was still quicker from 0-100km/h: 12.6 v 13.4 seconds.
The Mazda was joint-slowest in the standing start test, along with the Triton that was singularly slowest in rolling response (9.7sec) and with an engine that sounded the least refined on test.
Toyota was also towards the back of the pack on times, with figures of 13.1sec and 9.5sec not helped by the engineâs comparative lack of grunt or autoâs shortage of ratios.
The HiLux is the lightest of the group, though, even if at 1945kg thatâs a relative description.
Holdenâs Colorado scored respectable figures of 11.8sec and 8.6sec, behind or slightly ahead of its slightly-bigger-capacity twin, the D-Max (11.5 and 8.7sec). The Colorado is noisy at idle and low revs, however, while the Holdenâs auto also felt the busiest of the self-shifters, struggling to determine the appropriate gear.
Speed is far from everything when it comes to workhorse utes, though, and the HiLux, as well as the BT50, Triton and D-Max, hardly feel insufficient for their purposes.
If performance is a priority, the Navara STX is untouchable. In the 0-100 sprint it was the only ute to duck below 10 seconds â" going two seconds faster than the next quickest ute (Amarok, 11.7sec). It also topped the 80-120km/h tests, using all of its mid-range might to record a straight 7.0 seconds.
The effortless nature of Nissanâs V6 was noticeable beyond the numbers, with a quick-thinking auto while it was also one of the quietest performers along with the VW.
Thereâs no question of the importance of fuel economy, and CarAdviceâs real world figures show a greater spread of numbers than the official ADRs. According to the official combined cycle, just 1.5 litres separates the best-in-class D-Max (8.1L/100km auto) and worst-in-group Triton (9.6L/100km auto).
CarAdviceâs figures â" calculated after testing on a mixture of freeway, urban, rural and forest trail â" revealed the D-Max to still be the most efficient of the auto diesels, with 10.0L/100km, but nearly four litres worse for the Ranger (13.7L/100km).
Itâs difficult to say how much the newness of the Fordâs five-cylinder affected the result, though it was the heaviest vehicle on test at 2159kg. The BT-50 had only a few hundred more kays on the clock though a direct comparison isnât possible as the Mazdaâs 9.2L/100km result benefited from the manual gearbox.
There were no excuses for the Triton (13.4L/100km); the Navara can argue 11.9L/100km is acceptable for class-leading outputs and performance; Colorado (11.2L/100km) and HiLux (11.1L/100km) were top-half performers; the Amarok (10.2L/100km) was a commendable third place (and auto runner-up) for economy.
DRIVING
Utes still need to have the ability to carry heavy loads, so you wonât find any of the multi-link or torsion beam suspensions found under most passenger cars or SUVs.
Leaf spring rear suspensions are consistent throughout our range, along with ladder-frame chassis. Rear drum brakes are also common, with the HiLux an exception with disc brakes both front and rear.
So all utes are equal when it comes to compromising between handling loads and roads, though some are more equal than others.
Volkswagen, as the first mainstream European manufacturer to build a ute, actually offers buyers a choice of suspension for the Amarok depending on needs.
A standard heavy-duty suspension is for buyers expecting their ute trays to regularly pile on the pounds; a no-cost-option âcomfortâ suspension, fitted to our test vehicle, removes a leaf from the rear springs to improve ride comfort but does cut the payload by 200kg.
Thereâs still a firm ride to the Amarok and it wonât absorb bumps as well as a well-sorted big SUV, but its comfort levels on the majority of roads are only bettered by the Ranger and Navara, followed by the Fordâs more stiffly sprung twin, the BT-50.
Despite its age, the Nissanâs ride, while lumpy on the freeway, is nicely supple and cushions occupants on bumpy roads that bring intrusions to the cabins of the HiLux, D-Max, Triton and Colorado.
The VW, Ford and Mazda utes, however, are in an elite club when it comes to having the most car-like behaviour on the road. Each manages to avoid the undesired body movements noticeable to varying degrees in the other models. The Toyota, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Isuzu and Holden all feel like they need a load in the tray to reduce bouncing over undulating country roads.
The steering in the Ranger and BT-50 is particularly uncanny in their car-like traits â" both perfectly weighted and relatively direct compared with rivals that require much more arm-twirling to navigate corners or turns (none more so than the boat-like Triton).
Amarokâs steering isnât quite so precise around the straight-ahead position, though its smoothness and light weighting is impressively familiar from any other Volkswagen.
If you were a tradie trading up from a great-handling car-based ute like the Holden Commodore Ute, the Amarok, Ranger and BT-50 would be a less dramatic change dynamically than stepping into the others.
The HiLux, though, was a surprise in a way. Despite being the oldest ute on test, thereâs a simple solidity to the Toyota in the way it copes with corners, offers decent steering weighting and accuracy, and has a suitably meaty feel to its pedals.
The steering of the D-Max and Navara is also likeable, though the Coloradoâs steering is vague and suffers badly from rack rattle. The Holden also had the worst brake pedal calibration in the group â" feeling like hard work to bring to a stop compared with the other utes â"Â and it sits at the bottom of the group for refinement.
It had some of the most excessive wind noise and disappointing NVH (noise, vibration and harshness) that was embodied by an annoying buzz from the dash whenever the engine reached 1700rpm.
The Isuzuâs ride is jiggly though again it shades its Holden relative in another area because the Colorado is choppy over uneven surfaces. Mitsubishiâs Triton also struggles with body control, and is the least convincing on country roads owing to its ultra-slow steering and sloppy handling.
All of the utes can handle sloppy conditions, though. We took the group through a challenging forest trail that included deep water crossings, big and muddy ruts, and steep, rocky climbs and descents, and all traversed successfully.
That includes the Amarok that has the lowest ground clearance in the group, at 192mm, and is the only vehicle not feature a low-range transfer case. Instead, though, the TDI420âs auto employs a short first gear to aid crawling (with high-geared 8th gear for economy) and an Off-road Mode can be activated at up to 130km/h via a button to alter the calibration of the stability control, electronic diffs and brakes to adjust for trickier terrain.
The hill descent control employable below 30km/h also proved effective.
CARRYING PEOPLE
Our three-up testing supported our driver-only assessment, with Paul and Dean occupying rear seats and finding the Colorado and Triton offered the least comfortable rides â" the Holden especially due to its excessive pitching and the Mitsubishi especially for its excessive bounce that saw them hit their heads on the roof.
Most headroom was afforded by the Amarok (pictured below), HiLux, Ranger and BT-50, with the best forward vision and best under-thigh bench support provided by the same utes.
The Amarokâs bench has the best bench angle but was also declared the firmest. The Colorado and D-Max have relatively soft benches in comparison.
HiLux is a bit squeezed on width to take three adults as comfortably as other utes, though the Navara has the least accommodating rear seat.
The Nissan (pictured below) is short on legroom and footspace, and its bolt-upright seatback means awkward, knees-up posture for passengers regardless of (adult) height. Itâs also the only ute in this group to omit a centre rear headrest. None of the utes offers rear vents, though.
Up front, the HiLux and Triton interior designs betray their age â" looking a decade old compared with newer utes such as the Amarok, Ranger and BT-50. The Navaraâs chunky, vertical dash still holds up well.
The Ranger and BT-50 twins go different ways (though with some shared parts), with the Ford adopting a more machismo look to the Mazdaâs smarter, cleaner design that was the test teamâs preference. (Exterior design is another matter, however, with the Rangerâs styling considered vastly better for its vehicle type not just against the Mazda but the rest of the group.)
The Isuzu and Holden brother-in-laws share much of their interior parts, including an infotainment display thatâs disappointing for its narrowness and lack of colour compared with similar screens from other newer-generation utes.
The D-Max, however, has a higher perception of quality. The Coloradoâs fit and finish lets it down especially, with misaligned joins and a window switch panel that wouldnât take much effort to break off from the door.
Cheap roof lining is found on every ute, and soft plastics are rare â" making way for hard plastics that are excusable in a uteâs case for the sake of durability.
The variety of surface textures lift the image of both the Ranger and BT-50, though itâs the Volkswagen Amarok that has the classiest interior design thanks to instrument dials, heating and ventilation controls and an infotainment screen that clearly relate the Amarokâs cabin with the likes of the Golf and Passat.
Even the (large) door bins are carpeted, while no ute could match the satisfying door-closing thuds of the VW that enhanced its reputation for build quality on test. (The driverâs door of our test BT-50 was actually difficult to shut, though this is the first time weâve experienced this problem with the Mazda.)
CARRYING LOADS
When it comes to tray dimensions, the verdict from our guest tradies, Paul and Dean, were that none of the utes could claim a decisive advantage that would make you choose one over the other.
All trays are inevitably shorter than those found on the Falcon and Commodore two-door utes, while they said a 1.8 x 1.2 metre sheet of plywood common to the building trade, for an example, would still need to be laid over the back of the tailgate.
That includes the Amarok, which brings the biggest tray to the group in length, width and width between wheel arches. For the record, the Colorado has the shortest tray, and the Triton has the narrowest (including distance between wheel arches).
All have good tray depths, though tradies Paul and Dean pointed out that noticeable gaps between the bottom of the tailgate and the tray floor on the Colorado and Navara had potential to see smaller tools fall out.
Most of the utes provide four tie-down points though the Ranger and BT-50 provide six. The Ford also includes a handy 12v 20amp charge point. The Nissan Navara differs by including four adjustable points on the sides with two tray rails to accommodate more adjustable points.
These utes are known as âOne Tonnersâ owing to their ability to carry about half the vehicleâs own mass, with of our group able to carry more than 1000 kilograms and the other half less. (Figures vary slightly where manual transmissions are available.)
The Mazda BT-50 gets the Samson award with its 1088kg payload capacity, ahead of the other one-tonne-plus carriers the Colorado (1047kg), Ranger (1041kg) and D-Max (1015kg).
The HiLux (940kg) and Triton (931kg) are similar, and the Navara is relatively weak-armed with a 906kg payload. Volkswagenâs Amarok can haul 969kg with standard Heavy Duty suspension but falls to just 769kg with the lighter Comfort suspension.
SAFETY
As we said in the introduction, ute manufacturers have made big safety steps in recent years. Volkswagen started the trend in 2011 when the Amarok became the first dual-cab ute to achieve a maximum five-star rating from independent crash test body NCAP.
The Ranger and BT-50 followed later the same year, and the Holden Colorado joined the club in 2012. Its Japanese twin, the Isuzu D-Max, just missed out, however. It scored perfect marks in side impact and pole tests but rated lower than the Holden for occupant protection in the offset frontal crash test. Its four stars put it on par with the older models â" Triton, HiLux and Navara.
All trim grades of the dual-cab utes offer electronic stability control, which can help prevent an accident in the first place. Itâs worth noting, however, that HiLux models below the range-topping SR5 miss out on this important technology.
Thereâs still more that could be done from all the makers. Itâs surprising only the Amarok TDI420 and Ranger XLT are the only utes here to include rear sensors as standard. Theyâre optional on the BT-50 XTR and Holden Colorado LTZ, while the Navara STX550 we tested does feature them but not the regular STX weâre essentially comparing.
Thereâs a fairly large ink stain on Volkswagenâs safety book, though, because the Amarok is the only ute in the group to not offer a side curtain airbag that can also help protect rear passengers in the event of an accident. The HiLux (pictured below) also disappoints by including a lap-only belt for the centre rear passenger.
THE CARADVICE VERDICT
Itâs not unexpected that its newer-generation utes that occupy the top three positions in our comparison test, though itâs the class of 2011 rather than the class of 2012 that excels.
The Holden Colorado is in the latter group and was a US$2 billion development project according to General Motors, though while its joint highest towing capacity and five-star crash rating will appeal to many buyers the disappointing levels of refinement and interior quality, plus a choppy ride, are among the factors that let it down.
Mitsubishiâs Triton was one of the picks of this segment not so many years ago, but age has caught up with it faster than either the year-older Toyota HiLux and Nissan Navara and itâs the least appealing of the dual-cab utes to drive.
The HiLux and Navara sit in the middle of this pack, along with the Isuzu D-Max.
Thereâs solidity to the Toyota that supports its tough-as-nails reputation, and while it doesnât stand out in any particular area neither does it do much wrong. Its price tag is relatively high but is also balanced by the joint-highest resale value and cheapest servicing.
The D-Max is sharply priced but while it canât quite match the Coloradoâs standard features, the Isuzu betters its twin in terms of fit and finish while testers preferred the carry-over drivetrain to the Holdenâs new 2.8-litre diesel auto combination. It also has the best warranty.
Nissanâs Navara also falls a full star short of the best utes in class. Its V6 turbo diesel was a favourite with journalists and tradies alike, and its interior doesnât look as old as the cabins of the HiLux and Triton. But a high price tag that equipment struggles to justify, as well as the least comfortable and spacious rear seat makes the Navara the last of these utes youâd choose for accommodating family members or work-mates, costs the Nissan points.
So to those terrific 2011 utes, the Ford Ranger, Mazda BT-50 and Volkswagen Amarok.
When it comes to car-like steering, ride comfort and the best composure on country roads (many tradies are driving enthusiasts), the Ranger, BT-50 and Amarok are on another plain.
The Ford and Mazda twins are harder to split than the Colorado and D-Max brothers-in-law, virtually inseparable â" countering each other where they do actually differ.
The BT-50âs pricing undercuts the Ranger, for example, but the Ford closes some of the gap with extra standard features. Even judging subjectively on design, the test team unanimously preferred the Mazdaâs interior but equally all gave the Ford the nod for exterior design.
The Volkswagen Amarok just edges both in this comparison. Its steering isnât as sweet as either, and its ride quality isnât as perfectly judged as the Rangerâs. But in an era of dual-cab utes that have a broader role to play than ever before, the VW offers an excellent rear seat, the best interior in terms of design and quality, the biggest tray, permanent all-wheel drive for added assurance on slippery bitumen, and a brilliant engine and slick auto that bring deceptively strong performance and relatively parsimonious fuel consumption.
THE BUILDERSâ VERDICT
Paul and Dean largely shared their views on each of the utes. They said styling was an important factor for them, and both struggled with the curvy designs of the BT-50 and Triton.
The Ranger was their clear pick for design, saying it looked like âa baby brother to the tough F-150 truckâ. They also liked the Coloradoâs look but were otherwise disappointed by âthe way it drove, the way the cabin was finished, and the number of vibrationsâ.
Both were fans of the Navaraâs torque-laden engine but had issues with its cramped back seat and dated styling.
The D-Max and HiLux impressed them â" the Isuzu for a price tag that was âperfect for tradies on a budget and just needing a work hackâ, and the Toyota for its back seat comfort and reputation for aftersales, modification options and reliability.
They felt the Toyota was âa bit underpoweredâ, though, and the lack of a five-star crash rating for the HiLux, D-Max, Navara and Triton wasnât ideal.
The Navara joined the BT-50, Ranger and Amarok as the best utes to drive, in their view. They felt the Fordâs superior ride comfort made it preferable to the Mazda.
Paul (pictured above) and Dean had the most to say about the VW Amarok, believing it was the most car-like of the group, and wondering if it was almost âtoo flash to be a tradieâs vehicleâ.
They loved the âhigh-techâ gearbox and were amazed by the small engine that loved to rev yet delivered plenty of pulling power. Both said the availability of capped price servicing for the VW helped to overcome concerns about the companyâs reliability saga, though Dean said his love of serious off-roading meant the lack of a low-range transfer case for the TDI420 model ruled the Amarok out for him personally.
The Fordâs superior ride comfort placed it above the Mazda in their rankings, and both named the Ranger as their overall favourite despite concerns about the Fordâs fuel consumption.
This comparison review first appeared in the August/September issue of the CarAdvice iPad magazine app. Head to the Apple App Store to download the entire issue.
Photography by Matyas Fulop.
Ford Ranger XLT
Â
Price: from $53,390
Engine: 3.2-litre 5-cyl turbo diesel
Power: 147kW at 3000rpm
Torque: 470Nm at 1500-2750rpm
Transmission: 6-sp automatic, part-time 4WD (manual standard)
0-100km/h: 12.6 seconds
Fuel consumption: 9.2L/100km claimed (13.7L/100km on test)
CO2 emissions: 246g/km
Holden Colorado LTZ
Â
Price: from $49,990
Engine: 2.8-litre 4-cyl turbo diesel
Power: 132kW at 3800rpm
Torque: 470Nm at 2000rpm (440Nm man.)
Transmission: 6-sp automatic, part-time 4WD (manual standard)
0-100km/h: 11.8 seconds
Fuel consumption: 9.1L/100km claimed (11.2L/100km on test)
CO2Â emissions: 242g/km
Isuzu D-Max LS-U
Â
Price: from $45,500
Engine: 3.0-litre 4-cyl turbo diesel
Power: 130kW at 3600rpm
Torque: 380Nm at 1800-2800rpm
Transmission: 5-sp automatic, part-time 4WD (manual standard)
0-100km/h: 11.5 seconds
Fuel consumption: 8.1L/100km claimed (10.0L/100km on test)
CO2 emissions: 214g/km
Mazda BT-50 XTR
Â
Price: from $48,890
Engine: 3.2-litre 5-cyl turbo diesel
Power: 147kW at 3000rpm
Torque: 470Nm at 1500-2750rpm
Transmission: 6-sp manual, part-time 4WD (auto optional)
0-100km/h: 13.4 seconds
Fuel consumption: 8.9L/100km claimed (9.2L/100km on test)
CO2 emissions: 235g/km
Mitsubishi Triton GLX-R
Â
Price: from $45,740
Engine: 2.5-litre 4-cyl turbo diesel
Power: 131kW at 4000rpm
Torque: 350Nm at 1800rpm (400Nm man.)
Transmission: 5-sp automatic, RWD with selectable full-time 4WD (manual standard)
0-100km/h: 13.4 seconds
Fuel consumption: 9.6L/100km claimed (13.4L/100km on test)
CO2 emissions: 253g/km
Nissan Navara STX
Â
Price: from $57,290
Engine: 3.0-litre V6 turbo diesel
Power: 170kW at 3750rpm
Torque: 550Nm at 1750rpm
Transmission: 7-sp automatic, part-time 4WD
0-100km/h: 9.7 seconds
Fuel consumption: 9.3L/100km claimed (11.9L/100km on test)
CO2 emissions: 246g/km
Toyota HiLux
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Price: from $50,990
Engine: 3.0-litre 4-cyl turbo diesel
Power: 126kW at 3600rpm
Torque: 343Nm at 1400-3400rpm
Transmission: 4-sp automatic, part-time 4WD (manual standard)
0-100km/h: 13.1 seconds
Fuel consumption: 9.3L/100km claimed (11.1L/100km on test)
CO2 emissions: 245g/km
Volkswagen Amarok TDI420 Highline
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Price: from $53,990
Engine: 2.0-litre 4-cyl twin-turbo diesel
Power: 132kW at 4000rpm
Torque: 420Nm at 1750rpm
Transmission: 8-sp automatic, AWD
0-100km/h: 11.7 seconds
Fuel consumption: 8.3L/100km claimed (10.2L/100km on test)
CO2 emissions: 219g/km
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