Wheels (Australia)

DUAL-CAB 4X4 UTE MEGATEST

IT’S X-CLASS WARFARE AS MERCEDES-BENZ BLEACHES THE BLUE-COLLAR DUAL-CAB WORKHORSE INTO A SPARKLING WHITE SHOW PONY. BUT IS IT SUFFICIENT­LY THOROUGHBR­ED TO MAKE EIGHT RIVALS EAT ITS DUST?

- WORDS ASH WESTERMAN, BYRON MATHIOUDAK­IS & DANIEL GARDNER PHOTOS ELLEN DEWAR & ALASTAIR BROOK

Family friendly rigs battle on road and in the bush

DUAL-CAB utes (and their various iterations) are now Australia’s third most popular vehicle group after small cars and medium SUVS. The Toyota Hilux tussles with Ford’s locally developed Ranger for the title of this nation’s best-seller, and within the next few years, Korea and France will most likely field their own contenders. With the Mercedes-benz X-class entering the fray and BMW openly contemplat­ing following suit, their relevance, as well as popularity, will continue to soar. But with ‘The Best or Nothing’ three-pointed-star brand blazing an upward trajectory for the genre, has the dual-cab ute actually evolved in terms of dynamics, comfort, refinement and finesse? We’ve chosen a mid-spec X250d Progressiv­e Dual Cab 4Matic auto (meaning four doors, five seats and 4x4) from $57,800, as well as eight correspond­ing competitor­s (mostly) skirting the low-to-mid $50K mark, to see whether the Germans’ re-engineerin­g of the Nissan Navara really has moved the game on. Sadly, we’re a few months out from the Ranger’s facelift, so we’ve had to make do with an MY18 XLT, but there’s been a host of refreshed or revised rivals since we last certified this crew (May 2016), including Holden’s RG Series II Colorado (essentiall­y a top-to-tail overhaul of the disappoint­ing 2012-era original that finished second-last two years ago), and refinement­s for the Nissan Navara, Isuzu D-max, Mazda BT-50, Mitsubishi Triton (the segment’s bronze medallist sales-wise) and Volkswagen Amarok. At the time of writing, the latter was the only dual-cab offering a V6 diesel. Can Wolfsburg repeat its 2016 Megatest victory?

Only the Hilux has remained pretty much unaltered since launching three years ago. A mid-fielder last time, will the Toyota keep up? Frustratin­gly, the $56,440 Double Cab as requested wasn’t available, so we ended up with a $48,560 SR (not including its optional alloys) – still $560 exxier than the flagship Triton Exceed. No wonder Mitsubishi sells so many of them.

Australian­s seeking a weekday workhorse-cumweekend plaything no longer have the luxury of shunning these body-on-frame technologi­cal dinosaurs for the far more sophistica­ted, car-based Holden Commodore and Ford Falcon utes. In the past, from a Wheels point of view at least, no imported utility had a hope in hell of matching our homegrown heroes on bitumen. Now, given the jack-of-all-trades expectatio­ns of this vehicle type, they’ll need to do more than just look tough and carry stuff.

With all this in mind, we’ve put the latest batch of dual-cab 4x4 utes through our Megatest regime, plus load and off-road tests (see right). Keep reading… BM

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