The Chronicle

WILLING AND ABLE

One of the market’s most affordable utes is well positioned to help Aussies explore their own backyard

- GRANT EDWARDS

When you’re a ute owner, things get done.

Within hours of getting behind the wheel of Mitsubishi’s Triton GLS, one couch was moved. Then a desk, filing cabinet, chair, followed by a cross-trainer.

There’s good reason why dual cabs have become commonplac­e around Australian households.

Toyota’s HiLux has held the nation’s top selling mantle for the past four years with the Ford Ranger snapping at its heels. Typically higher dual-cab prices mean both are out of reach for many, while Mitsubishi’s five-seater workhorse appeals with prices starting from about $35,990.

We’ve stepped into the GLS variant, which starts from $43,790 drive-away with a manual.

VALUE

Base variants are bereft of alloy wheels and some extra style. GLS models are where the specificat­ion begins to gain the best creature comforts.

Currently there is a drive-away offer of $44,790 with an automatic transmissi­on.

For the investment it comes with 18-inch alloys, seven-inch touchscree­n featuring smartphone mirroring apps Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, side steps, rear diff lock for extra traction, keyless entry with push button start and dual-zone aircon.

White and red are the only two external colours compliment­ary, silver, blue, grey and black cost an extra $740, while the special diamond white is $940.

Warranty coverage is seven years or 150,000km.

SAFETY

Among the first utes to raise the safety bar, the Triton has a five-star safety rating but that was awarded five years ago and the criteria has become more demanding.

Still, Mitsubishi upped its game two years ago and the GLS comes autonomous braking, which can slam on the anchors if the driver doesn’t react quick enough to a frontal collision (it detects pedestrian­s, too), along with a blind spot and lane change warning system.

Measuring more than 5.3m, the front and rear parking sensors as well as a reversing camera are vital for successful­ly navigating your way through suburban car parks. Rear cross traffic alert is also standard, which is an extra set of eyes when reversing.

One interestin­g inclusion is Mitsubishi’s misacceler­ation mitigation feature that guards against the driver mistakenly punching the accelerato­r instead of the brake when stationary or below 10km/h.

Radar cruise control is one of the few latest tech items missing.

COMFORT

Nothing too flashy, the Triton interior combines work and play.

The driver has only height adjustment of the steering wheel, no reach, although we had no issue finding a good position behind the wheel with brilliantl­y supportive front seats.

Cloth trim (leather is available on the Premium model that’s another $4850) feels like it’s in for the long haul within a cabin predominan­tly black and straightfo­rward in design.

Adding the smartphone mirroring apps brings the infotainme­nt up to modern expectatio­ns. Once plugged in via the USB port, it provides easy access to podcasts, music and Google Maps.

Those in the back sit upright, but have a roof-mounted air recirculat­ion system along with a fold-down armrest with cup holders.

DRIVING

Feeling sure-footed and robust, the Triton has developed an honest and reliable reputation.

The 2.4-litre four-cylinder diesel engine may not look inspiring on paper in comparison to rivals, but feels strong and responsive.

Those who opt for the auto — even tradies prefer the self-shifters nowadays — can use the steering wheel paddles for manual-style control. The auto offers timely shifts and the Triton gets away off the line briskly. Jump on the throttle with too much enthusiasm and the wheels chirp as it battles for traction.

Easy to drive, the turning circle of less than 12 metres is reasonable for a dual cab.

Unladen the Triton can feel light and jittery over coarse surfaces. That’s not uncommon for utes, engineers have to balance the task of also allowing for nearly a tonne in the back.

While towing capacity remains 3100kg, about 400kg less than the segment leaders, those looking to haul need to undertake the gross combinatio­n mass numbers (5885kg in this case).

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