Weekend Herald

TRIO AT THE TOP

Mazda, Isuzu and Toyota all have new one-tonners on the way

- David LINKLATER

It tends to be feast or famine in the world of utes — they’re mostly models with long life cycles, but their popularity and intense competitio­n also means we sometimes see furious newmodel activity.

There’s an important trio of new one-tonners being launched in New Zealand for 2020: an all-new incarnatio­n of one of the most controvers­ial utes on the market, a closely related reboot for a grassroots favourite and a heavily upgraded version of an icon.

Mazda BT-50

With the previous BT-50, Mazda made much of the fact it sported passenger-car styling cues. It was a controvers­ial look, with an incredibly smiley grille and horizontal tail-lights that crossed over into the tailgate — unique in the ute segment.

Mazda has again looked to its car styling with the all-new BT-50, but this time those passenger-car cues seem to sit rather gracefully on a double-cab platform. It’s very clearly part of the same family as the CX-8 and CX-9 SUVs, but also classy-looking in its own right.

The interior must be one of the most luxurious-looking in the ute segment, with a 9-inch touchscree­n and glossy trim inserts.

Power will come from a 3.0-litre turbo-diesel making 140kW/ 450Nm. It’s up with the segment best for towing (3.5 tonnes) and one-tonne payload.

Advanced driver assistance features are rapidly making their way into one-tonne utes. Like Hilux, the BT-50 will have features like adaptive cruise control, autonomous braking and lanekeep assistance.

The BT-50 is scheduled for launch late this year.

Isuzu D-Max

The biggest change for BT-50 is that it’s no longer built on the Ford Ranger platform — it’s now “supplied by Isuzu Motors Ltd on an OEM basis”, in Mazda’s own

words. That naturally means there’s also an all-new Isuzu D-Max on the way. It’s the model we know least about at the moment; but the tough new look was revealed late last year, with top models looking set to wear stylised bash plates and oversized wheel arch extensions.

The interior is different to the BT-50’s but has taken a similar step up in quality and technology, also with a 9-inch infotainme­nt screen. While the D-Max will be looking

to retain its status as a tough workhorse, there are car-like interior trims and colours in evidence.

Toyota Hilux

The Ford Ranger has been New Zealand’s number-one ute for six years now. But has the Blue Oval truck achieved the same iconic status as the evergreen Toyota Hilux?

Feel free to argue among yourselves.

The big news for Hilux at the end of the year will be a power bump to 150kW/500Nm for its 2.8-litre turbo-diesel engine, increases of

15 and 11 per cent respective­ly. There’s more towing ability: the automatic-transmissi­on 4WD models can now match the

3.5-tonne rating of the manual gearbox versions.

There are styling changes inside and out. Toyota NZ is slowly rolling out phone projection on updated models, so Hilux will join Corolla and C-HR (not to mention Lexus RX) in offering Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.

Hilux moves a little closer to the new-look RAV4 and Land Cruiser models with a larger grille and new headlights that further emphasise the width of the vehicle.

We know that there will be a New Zealand-developed launch edition with a number of enhancemen­ts, including beefed-up suspension.

No firm details yet, but it’ll be the closest thing yet to a Hilux rival for the Ranger Raptor.

Much further down the track it’s likely there will be a genuine GR Hilux — but that’ll be a different thing again, and certainly not this year.

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 ??  ?? From top: The Mazda BT-50, the Isuzu D-Max and the Toyota Hilux.
From top: The Mazda BT-50, the Isuzu D-Max and the Toyota Hilux.
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