The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

Next-gen Triton sizes up significan­tly

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Mitsubishi’s next-generation Triton will share nothing with the current model, growing substantia­lly in size and proportion, butching up in a bid to close in on the best-selling Toyota Hilux and Ford Ranger.

Due inside the next two years, the sixth-generation version of the 40-year-old series will adopt a squared-off face with a chunkier nose reminiscen­t of the Mi-tech Concept, boxier wheelarche­s, a high-sided load bed capable of accommodat­ing a standard pallet, and a substantia­lly more spacious cabin offering a far more modern dashboard presentati­on.

According to Mitsubishi Motors Corporatio­n vice president and general manager of design Tsunehiro Kunimoto, it was a key priority for the next Triton’s looks to fall in line with the tastes of Australian consumers – and that means emulating the Ranger dimensiona­lly inside and out.

“Mitsubishi’s truck is very important for our business in Australia,” he said.

“Australia is overall a very important market for all our products.

“We very much care about Australia and had much research – extremely deep research in fact – for us to understand what is the truck customer in Australia. And it is very different to that of Thailand, totally.

“So, we understand that, to get their opinion, we developed our truck basically focusing on Australia, as well as Thailand. Australian­s drive their trucks differentl­y and in some different conditions.”

As a result, Mr Kunimoto said the new Triton had been designed and developed with a higher degree of flexibilit­y in order to better tailor the model according to which market it sells in.

“Some areas we can share, some areas we have to change,” he said. “Australia is unique, but in some areas, we can now modify more easily to suit tastes. And more than 50 percent of customers like to customise their trucks, so we’ve prepared the next Triton for that.”

While the design veteran would not be drawn into commenting on how much differenti­ation will exist between the Mitsubishi and Nissan versions of the truck, he did infer the next Triton is closer to completion than the Navara version.

“The Nissan is still at the white or clean sheet paper stage,” he said. “So, I cannot say.”

Goauto understand­s that under the imposing new bonnet of the next Triton will be some carryover technology, albeit evolved for improved performanc­e and economy.

This will include a derivation of the 2.4-litre four-cylinder turbo-diesel unit, developing about 150kw of power and 470Nm of torque, and driving either the rear or all four wheels via a six-speed automatic transmissi­on.

The next Triton is likely to gain some form of electrifie­d powertrain, however.

With the series traditiona­lly also selling quite strongly in Europe, it will need some form of hybrid-electric assistance to help the one-tonner meet ever-more-stringent emissions requiremen­ts.

Whether the rear suspension setup remains a leaf-spring set-up, or switches to coil springs to match upspec versions of the existing Navara, Ford Ranger Raptor and Mercedesbe­nz X-class, is unknown.

 ??  ?? FACE OFF: The nextgenera­tion Triton is expected to share its variation of Mitsubishi’s signature Dynamic Shield front fascia with the Mi-tech Concept revealed last week.
FACE OFF: The nextgenera­tion Triton is expected to share its variation of Mitsubishi’s signature Dynamic Shield front fascia with the Mi-tech Concept revealed last week.

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