The Scotsman

MUSCLING IN

New pick-up moves Ssangyong’s game on again, writes Matt Allan

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Ssangyong – Korea’s oldest car brand and 4x4 specialist – is on a bit of a tear at the moment.

In quick succession since 2015 it has launched the Tivoli, its extended XLV spin-off, facelifted the Korando midsized SUV, launched an allnew Rexton, revealed an allelectri­c concept vehicle and staged a one-make pick-up truck racing championsh­ip.

Now, to finish off a busy few years it is preparing to launch an all-new version of the Musso pick-up.

Ahead of the truck’s official UK launch later this year we got a drive in a pre-production model to see how it stacks up.

The Musso is actually based on the same architectu­re as the new Rexton and that’s immediatel­y obvious from the outside. It shares the Rexton’s front end – tall, square and no-nonsense. It’s only once you get past the front doors that it changes, with a standard double-cab setup ahead of the pick-up bed.

As with the exterior, the interior is essentiall­y carried over from the Rexton. The Rexton moved Ssangyong on massively in terms of interior quality and it does the same for the Musso. Out have gone the brittle plastics and a dashboard that looked like it had been arranged in the dark and in has come a clean, simple cabin with good looking and feeling switchgear and a modern eight-inch infotainme­nt system. The seats are big and comfortabl­e, there’s loads of adjustment to get comfortabl­e and rear legroom in the double cab is decent.

It’s also astonishin­gly quiet. Road, wind and engine noise is amazingly suppressed for the segment, offer car-like levels of sound insulation.

The interior not only moves the new Musso a long way from the old one but also puts it ahead of several key rivals. It looks and feel nicer than the likes of the Isuzu D-max, Mitsubishi L200 and Nissan Navara, if not quite up to the standard of the VW Amarok.

That gap to the VW is at least partly excused by the price difference. An Amarok with its 3.0-litre V6 engine starts at £25,500 before VAT. The Musso will cost from less than £20,000 for commercial customers.

For that you’ll get a 2.2-litre diesel (it’s the only option) and a six-speed manual transmissi­on with selectable fourwheel-drive and high- and low-ratio. Specs are still to be confirmed but a six-speed auto gearbox, the eight-inch touchscree­n with Apple Carplay and Android Auto, six airbags, heated and ventilated seats and Nappa leather will be among the features on offer.

The Musso is one of only a few pick-ups to come with multilink rear suspension as standard. It’s more advanced than the traditiona­l leaf springs and offers a slightly more controlled ride, especially when unladen. It’s still clearly a pick-up, though, fidgeting and jiggling on dodgy road surfaces.

That can be helped by filling the deep load bed with whatever you need to haul. It’ll carry a tonne of cargo and, as with most rivals can tow up to 3,500kg. That heavy-duty ability, the low list price and a segment-leading five-year warranty make the Musso an impressive propositio­n for buyers in the market for a wellequipp­ed workhorse.

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