Mercury (Hobart)

Epic finale

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It costs HOW much? If you thought $60,000 was a lot of money for a Toyota HiLux with the lot, how about $80,000 for a Holden V8 ute? The Holden Special Vehicles Maloo 30th anniversar­y edition is $3000 more than the standard model, pushing the price to $79,990 plus on-road costs. The supercharg­ed LSA 6.2-litre V8 gets a power bump from 400kW to 410kW and a torque boost from 671Nm to 691Nm, “torque vectoring” tech from the GTS sedan (to make it more stable in high-speed corners) and a bunch of 30th anniversar­y labels. The massive six-piston brakes normally reserved for the GTS are a $3495 option. All up, this ute is nearly $90,000 in the traffic — and the even more expensive $96,990 GTSR Maloo is around the corner:.

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It’s fast but not quick

The HSV Maloo goes as you’d expect a supercharg­ed ute to perform: like a rocket. Just not from a standing start. It can’t get all its power to the ground because there’s not as much weight over the rear wheels compared to the sedan. Which is why, despite being lighter than the sedan overall, the HSV Maloo has slightly slower 0-100km/h times. The best we could get is 5.0 seconds; the sedan stops the clock in 4.7 seconds. Once on the move, though, it feels epic.

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Get a move on

If you want one, better be quick. Only 200 or so Maloo 30th editions will be built between now and the end of production, as the company ramps up production of its flagship GTSR models (including 600 GTSR Maloo utes). Beyond that, HSV will be working its magic on General Motors’ imported products.

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