Manawatu Standard

New D-max still no-nonsense ute

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do matter in the world of utes. It’s now within striking distance of the Mitsubishi Triton (437Nm) and a maximum output that starts with a ‘‘4’’ maintains honour against the Toyota Hilux (450Nm) and Ranger (470Nm). Colorado still twists its way to victory among the diesel fours with 500Nm, though.

The D-max diesel sounds a little gruff but performs with a good deal of verve, revving freely and well-supported by the new sixspeeder.

In 4WD models you can shift from 2WD to 4-High ‘‘on the fly’’ with a simple rotary controller, at speeds of up to 100kmh; the RT87 model has also gained hill descent control for the first time. Tow rating for the D-max across the range is 3500kg. Of course.

While the cabin is big on durable plastic and short on design-detail, there are more than a few home-comforts included in the new D-max. The most impressive is a new eight-inch touch-screen that includes an excellent sat-nav system with Suna traffic informatio­n, as used by Toyota and Hyundai. Perhaps the D-max can tackle city streets after all.

The cabin’s actually quieter than the previous model thanks to extra sound insulation, or it can be noisier if you take advantage of the new eight-speaker sound system. It’s still not exactly premium sound, but not terrible either. Dual USB ports in the back are another addition to LS and above.

In this day of flashy light commercial­s, the weird thing about the D-max is that it’s actually a bit of a feel-good propositio­n.

During our week with the truck everybody seemed to give the Isuzu brand the thumbs-up and there seemed to be genuine admiration for a decently specified pickup truck that wasn’t trying its hardest to be a high-end SUV. Even among city-dwellers.

If you’re at all sentimenta­l about utes (who isn’t?), this particular shape of D-max will be significan­t in the future as the last vestige of a relationsh­ip between Isuzu and Gm/holden that stretches back over four decades. Isuzu’s pickup truck was sold as the Holden Rodeo from 1980-2008 and when GM divested itself of its shareholdi­ng in the Japanese company, the ute (and lightcomme­rcial partnershi­p) carried on as the Colorado.

The current generation of Colorado and D-max, launched in 2012, still share a platform and basic body shape. In 2013, the two companies even announced a project to develop the nextgenera­tion ute together.

But in 2016 the partnershi­p bottomed out for good. A media statement issued by GM in July said: ‘‘Both GM and Isuzu agree due to unique requiremen­ts for each company, joint developmen­t of the next-generation midsize pickup truck is no longer the optimal model for this project.’’

Translatio­n: GM wants to move upmarket, Isuzu wants another nononsense ute.

Isuzu’s next one-tonner, due in 2020, will be a joint developmen­t with Mazda. Who’s doing which parts? Nobody seems to know at this stage. But it’s a fair guess that Isuzu will be rolling its sleeves up and doing the oily bits.

 ??  ?? D-max is mostly work, less play than other ‘lifestyle’ utes. Even in more luxurious LS specificat­ion.
D-max is mostly work, less play than other ‘lifestyle’ utes. Even in more luxurious LS specificat­ion.

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