Weekend Herald

Colorado Xtreme

HOLDEN'S COLORADO Z71 XTREME

- MATTHEW HANSEN

The problem with naming a place Great Barrier Island is that it opens it up to misplaced scrutiny down the road from bored people with nothing better to do.

“Oh yeah, what's so Great about it?”

A half-hour flight out of Auckland Airport will deliver you to Great Barrier — home to about 1000 people and the location of the launch of Holden's Colorado Z71 Xtreme. With an X.

Much like the island, the Holden carries similar naming concerns. Xtreme opens the door to cynics, eager to leaf through the spec sheet to find out whether it lives up to the moniker.

The beefed-up dual-cab pick-up made its debut appearance at Fieldays this year. Two years before, Holden used the same event to showcase the Xtreme Concept and interest was so high it decided to make it. It goes on sale this month, and just 30 will be available to the New Zealand market.

Pricing starts at $79,990, placing it firmly in the range-topping ute mix. That makes it four grand more than the entry-level automatic HSV SportsCat and eight grand more than a Toyota Hilux Gladiator 3 — but also $3000 less than an HSV SportsCat+ automatic and $5000 less than a Ford Ranger Raptor.

But perhaps the most valid pricing comparison is against the vehicle the Xtreme is based on; the $66,990 Colorado Z71 automatic.

The pairing shares quite a bit with one another. They come with the same strong 2.8-litre turbodiese­l Duramax engine under the bonnet, producing 147kW and

500Nm — helping achieve a

3.5-tonne towing capacity and slightly over a tonne of payload capacity.

That engine is hooked up to a familiar six-speed automatic transmissi­on (no manual is offered). And, the interiors are similar, save for leather seats with orange stitching and Xtreme logos

woven into the headrests. Beyond that, the cabin carries over the Z71’s impressive fit and finish and MyLink infotainme­nt package, which includes Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.

Although it might look like it adopts a more aggressive stance on first look, ride-height is unchanged on the Xtreme. Front spring rates have been beefed up in the front, but this is namely to account for the added weight of the winch and all its supporting parts.

The more aggro stance is down to those new flared arches and the new all-terrain tyres that sit behind them. They’re a Wrangler 265/60R18 tyre that offers better off-road performanc­e than the Bridgeston­e Duelers on the standard Z71.

The four-wheel drive system — which makes used of a helical limited-slip differenti­al instead of a locking rear diff — remains unchanged.

Our time behind the wheel of the Z71 Xtreme started at Medlands Beach. We’d then meander across Great Barrier Island’s twisty, cambered roads to Port Fitzroy before circling back to Tryphena. Most of the roads are narrow, without lines, tight and have little to protect you should things turn sour.

It’s a different place, this island. It doesn’t feel like anywhere else in New Zealand. Things look and feel like they’re from a simpler period.

Everyone driving in the other direction waves at you.

Housing is a blend of old homes and sheds on their last legs mixed with modern seaside baches.

The closest rental car company to the airport is a home inundated with late-80s Mazda 121s — all decorated in the colours of other countries. Did I mention that the scenery is gorgeous everywhere? Great, this island certainly is. So does the Xtreme manage to live up to its name too? Well, that depends.

The route didn’t necessaril­y test the ramped-up ’Rado’s limits, but it did include numerous off-road tracks on a mixture of surfaces; including sand, gravel, and metal. The ute never left its default twowheel drive setting and never felt challenged across the different forms of terrain even as our speeds increased throughout the day.

On road, it remains one of the class standouts thanks to the slickness of that six-speed automatic and the Centrifuga­l Pendulum Absorber torque converter that kills much of the 2.8-litre diesel engine’s harshness before it reaches the cabin. And thankfully, the front-end suspension changes and all-terrain tyres haven’t impacted on-road refinement.

A dollop of wind noise at speed from the roof tray is one of the few flies in the Xtreme’s ointment.

As we’ve touched on in the past, the sad fact of many players in this top-end, double-cab segment is that few of them will see the sort of workhorse off-roading they were intended for.

Is this Colorado extreme? Well, that’s down to those who buy it and just how far off the beaten track they go.

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Photos / Matthew Hansen
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