Skip navigation

carsguide.com.au

Nissan Patrol: here?s the holiday fun

  • By Stuart Innes
  • The Daily Telegraph

Get off the beaten track this summer with Nissan's new Patrol DX.

The holidays are looming and if getting off the beaten track for a camping trip is your idea of fun, there's a sharp deal on offer from Nissan. Nissan has released a limited-edition Patrol DX Walkabout which features more than $7000 in free extras. The $49,990 (a standard DX retails for $50,290) Walkabout adds alloy wheels, a six-CD stacker, bullbar and $2000 of camping equipment to the DX, but just 275 vehicles are available.

Meanwhile Nissan has also given its heavy-duty ute, the Patrol cab-chassis a new-look exterior and an updated three-litre diesel engine.

The ZD30 turbocharged diesel engine with intercooler is also used in the Patrol wagon range and has been recently upgraded with a common-rail fuel injection system.

One more apparent benefit of the engine, which replaces the previous older-technology 4.2-litre diesel, is the rated towing-capacity increase from 2500kg to an impressive 3200kg. Another plus for Patrol utes is that they are four-wheel-drive, complete with dual-range option. Patrol has serious off-bitumen credentials. The cab-chassis comes in two spec levels, the DX and the better-equipped ST. The DX can be ordered with coil or leaf rear suspension. The rear leaf springs are claimed to give optimum load-carrying ability and durability in rough conditions. All versions have a coil-sprung front end and an anti-sway bar.

All have the five-speed manual gearbox and limited-slip differential. Standard equipment includes double door seals (to help keep out dust and noise), wide-opening doors, CD player and airconditioning. The ST gets carpet, power windows, central locking, side steps, map lights and large centre console. The DX has a driver's bucket seat and a two-person passenger bench seat, while the ST has two bucket seats. All DX leaf-spring and ST models have standard dual front airbags. The DX coil-sprung models have airbags as an option. Coil-sprung DX and ST models are fitted with four-wheel disc brakes, while the DX leaf spring model has large rear drum brakes and front discs.

Pricing on the updated models remains unchanged: from $49,790 for the DX with leaf springs, $50,180 for the DX with coils and from $52,890 for the ST.

The ZD30 engine standard in all Patrol cab-chassis utes is a 2953cc job with double overhead camshafts, turbocharged and intercooled — giving 118kW power at 3200rpm-3400rpm and 380Nm of torque at 2000rpm-24000rpm.

The 95-litre diesel tank is backed up by an 80-litre sub tank, which promises good range for rural and bush use.

Patrol cab-chassis tare without a tray fitted is 1997kg for the DX with coil springs, 2123kg for the DX with leaf springs and 2009kg for the ST with coils. GVM is 3150kg, 3400kg and 3150kg.

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 9 comments

  • John Edwards, I am 6,2 and never had an issue… mind you I did use the tray for carrying stuff… call me stupid but thats the way I did it.

    Mike Cook, are you paid to be a goose or do you just do it for free?  It’s known the world over that the diffs in the GU/GQ are far and away better than that of the Tojo’s… which are the next best thing.  I owned one for 7 or so years.  Drove it up the beach religously, ran 315/75/16’s as well, also wheeled the crap out of it, particularly in the early days… never broke a thing.  Is still the best car I have ever owned.  And I say car because thats what it drove like on the road, even lifted and big tyres it was such an easy drive.  Even to the point where I had a blowout at 160kph (on 33’s) and all that happened was the vehicle dropped on a side and then I easily broke and pulled it up safely, after changing accross three lanes to do it.  Like I said, BEST CAR EVER!

    clayton of Caboolture Posted on 03 May 2012 3:35pm
  • Mike Cook, if you have had 4 in 4 yrs and this is your opinion then it is you that is hardly reliable. I do not know of anyone who buys a vehicle 4 times if they are not happy with it. You must be a few stubbies short of a six pack, to put it nicely too. Check out Landcruiser diff conversions. They use a GU unit for reliability and ruggednesss. I do not class a gravel road as off road but I bet that Pajero won’t go far with its limited travel independant suspension. As for the box, you have to put gearbox oil in it. I don’t know what you are using. I have owned a 3L Patrol for 3 years, it has 300K on the clock, it will still get Landcruisers out of the proverbial. Very capable of holding circle work and does hill climbs in 2WD where others engage 4WD. Where other vehicles fail it has never failed me. The only problem is that the air-con compressor sits too low for running throug bog holes that fill wheel arches and need to remove pulley to repack bearing. I have towed 2.8 tonnes plenty of times, drove it like it is stolen, and it still goes well and never misses a beat. I am hard on my equipment and it still goes well never failing me. To all you pesimists, buy a horse and cart then whinge… small minds, big opinion.

    James Brown of Brisvegas Posted on 02 May 2010 2:05pm
  • Nissan horror stories… I’m sick of hearing about them. If your going to buy a GU 3ltr diesel make sure it is post 2004. That appears to be when they fixed their fluff up in the 3 ltr motor. Or on the other hand you could reach not so high and buy a GQ. Mine is an 88 model 4.2 petrol and LPG; never had a problem. Recovered too many unfortunates to count of all breeds and sizes, including more than a handful of GU’s 80 series. Cannot fault it, power, torque, willingness to go anywhere, sand, mud, boulders, gravel… anything. Great vehicles, just use them properly and look after them and they will get you home time after time.

    Heath Ehrich of LOGAN CITY QUEENSLAND Posted on 01 May 2010 12:55pm
  • Everypinion on Patrol is personal.As such all I can say : DO NOT BUY A PATROL especially
    the ZD30 engined verion (the only diesel left
    in production) as thy ALL blow up.If one has not than its only a question of TIME.Mine has blown at 170k (out of warranty) and Nissan does not want to know me without $8000 for a rebuild on badly designed engine.Save money.Dont spend it on rubbish.Dont believe me ?Check the horror stories.Google :Nissan Patrol engine problems -hundreds of people that went through the Nissan nightmare.You will thank me for the warning.

    Robert Zdunek of Sydney Posted on 20 December 2009 5:13pm
  • A most excellent 4x4. Just an overgrown estate with ultimate offroad credentials. A proper 7 seater. Engine affords economy and encourages safe and defensive driving. Towing capability is awesome. SVE has an excellent specification. Cheaper than the Toyota and Mitsubishi offerings. Excellent value and quality.

    Trounces Volvo’s XC90, BMW’s X5 and Mercedes ML series ‘4x4’s’. The only other vehicle that I can compare it with is the Unimog!

    Absolutely the best truck! Nothing more nothing less engineering philosophy. As a qualified Engineer, I salute Nissan’s Engineers for producing the ABSOLUTE BEST 4x4!

    Mohsin Latif BEng MSc.

    MOHSIN LATIF of LONDON, ENGLAND Posted on 07 December 2008 6:37pm
  • Nissan Patrol ZD 30.  I’ve had 4 in 4 years.  Take it from someone who drives one everyday and actually has to use it off road a lot.  They are garbage.  Reliable?  Hardly.  The engines self destruct.  They have no torque and can’t even climb steep inclines.  They handle like an aircraft carrier, have a small cramped cabin and the manual gearbox feels like a box of gravel mixed with mud.  Do not drive one in the sand, the diffs just go bang.  Don’t waste your money people.  They are apalling.  Good marketing and cheap pricing keeps them alive.  Its scarey and I would not believe it if I hadn’t been there but a diesel pajero eats the patrol alive in every way!  In fact, it towed our patrol out when it did its usual trick and broke down.  You couldn’t pay me to keep a patrol.

    Mike Cook of Gippsland Posted on 12 September 2008 10:36pm
  • No argument that the GU Patrol is mechanically primitive compared to most current model 'all-terrain' 4WDs.

    It has part-time activation without, ABS excepted, any of the electronic driver aids that have infected even traditional 4WDs like Land Rover's Defender and Jeep's Wrangler. (Outback motor mechanics say that the most common cause of vehicle failure they come across is electronics.)

    The GU¿s rigid-axle front end doesn't give anything like the same on-road handling and ride of IFS.

    Even though the big Nissan's four-pot turbo-diesel is left gasping and turbo-lagged by the latest high-tech oilers, it's important to remember that off-roading is all about getting there, not getting there first. The ZD30 has enough oomph to get the job done. It¿s also available with a manual gearbox, unlike the plethora of auto-onlys that can overheat their transmission fluid and lose drive in really rough going.

    No, the GU doesn't have a state-of-the-art interior ¿ not surprising, given that its body is essentially a mid-1990s design and at least a full generation behind most of the competition. But it's still plenty big enough inside for all but NBL basketballers, and adequately equipped for comfortable off-road travel.

    Yet despite what many motoring writers - and some 4WD writers who should know better ¿ consider ¿drawbacks¿, the GU remains arguably the greatest off-road 4WD on the market.

    It's undisputably the toughest mechanically, with less to break down and leave you stranded out in the bush.

    It also costs a bundle less than most of the competition.

    In a nutshell, the GU Patrol stands the best chance of getting you to your off-road destination - and back home again - of any mass-produced ¿all terrain¿ 4WD on the market.

    Which, when all's said and done, is far more important than trendy styling and a pile of creature comforts.

    'Morris Dancer' (freelance 4WD journalist) Posted on 23 November 2007 3:51pm
  • The holidays are looming and if getting off the beaten track for a camping trip is your idea of fun, there's a sharp deal on offer from Nissan. Unfortunately one will be stuck with the lumbering barge for the other 48 weeks of the year.

    Howard Posted on 21 November 2007 3:32pm
  • Great Ute that is suited to this country BUT there is no room in the cabin for tall people plus luggage room behind the seats would make it more practical as an all round traveller.

    john Edwards Posted on 21 November 2007 12:22pm
Read all 9 comments

Add your comment on this story

Indicates required

We welcome your comments on this story. Comments are submitted for possible publication on the condition that they may be edited. Please provide your full name. We also require a working email address - not for publication, but for verification. The location field is optional.

Cars for sale

Sponsored Links