What's the difference?
The BYD Shark 6 Premium has burst onto the scene with plenty of hype and a bit of side-eye from Aussie ute loyalists.
We’re a tough crowd, especially when it comes to vehicles that need to juggle family life, work gear, and weekend adventures.
So we put this handsome newcomer to the test to see whether it delivers genuine practicality and fun, or if it’s simply talking the talk in a ute-shaped body.
With one of the best-selling utes in the country, the trend-setting Raptor variant, and now a plug-in hybrid, Ford is seemingly at the top of the ute segment with its Ranger.
When you’re already at the top of your game though, what do you do next?
The answer, it seems, is to create something entirely new for the dual-cab segment, and that’s what Ford aims to do with its Super Duty range.
Perhaps the antithesis of the Raptor and Platinum, the Super Duty pushes the standard dual-cab formula as tough as it can go. And with significant development costs spent here in Australia, and a long consultation period with the intended customers, has Ford created something special?
Let’s find out.
The BYD Shark 6 Premium is perfect for weekend camping trips or ferrying the family around the city, but the underpowered engine, mixed handling, and quirky safety tech hold it back. If it could match its rivals’ capability while keeping its sharp looks, it would be a near-perfect package but right now, it just doesn’t.
I can definitely see the pitch for the Ranger Super Duty. For fleets, having a vehicle with more modern safety, comfort, and thoughtful technologies is compelling when the alternative is an old Toyota 70 Series or a hardly-suitable-for-Aussie-roads full-size American pick-up.
It is beefed up for whatever the trails can throw at it, and more than work-ready without the need for months of conversion work, but for private buyers, do you really need this? For some niche towing and off-road applications it’s an unbeatable factory offering, but I’d argue it’s expensive overkill for most.
Still, Ford’s customer-centric approach is commendable. It will be interesting to see if it can simply create a 4.5T GVM sub-segment for the dual-cab market in the same way Raptor did for performance variants.
Note: CarsGuide attended this event as a guest of the manufacturer, with travel, accommodation and meals provided.
The BYD Shark 6 is a seriously handsome ute from almost every angle. It’s boxy and beefy enough to look tough in the school-pick-up line but not so over-styled that it feels try-hard. The wide lighting signature at the front and rear gives it a modern, tech-forward vibe which is a nice hint at what’s going on underneath.
From behind the wheel, space is the first thing you notice. The cabin feels huge and well thought out, finished in black synthetic leather with contrasting orange stitching that adds a sporty pop. You’ll spot the same orange highlights on the air vents, and together with the soft-touch trim and matt-metallic details, the Shark easily punches above its price point in terms of cabin quality.
And then there’s the centre console, which is one of my favourite parts of the interior. With its chunky grab handles, large gear selector and row of tactile switches, it has a bit of a cockpit-meets-ute look going on. The orange starter button is a fun touch too. The only quirk? The tailgate release button sits close enough that it’s a little too easy to tap by mistake and although you have to confirm the selection via the media display, it's still annoying to accidentally press.
The Super Duty dwarfs a standard Ranger on the road. The track is as wide as a Raptor, while the height has increased significantly. It looks almost as though someone dropped a Ranger in Photoshop and told it to increase everything by 15 per cent.
The chunky grille, re-designed blocky fenders to accommodate the extra width, intentionally squared-off wheel arches, and beefed-up ride height with correspondingly larger wheels make the Super Duty imposing on the road.
Like its relatives overseas, the Super Duty logo is three-dimensionally imprinted on the bonnet, and the factory tray being available in a range of finishes (steel, matt black, or colour matching) either adds to the ruggedness or street appeal depending on what the buyer is after.
All of this is not just to make the car look tough, but also to accommodate the depth of changes underneath, because the Super Duty is so fundamentally different from a standard Ranger it’s almost an entirely new vehicle.
Even things as core as the chassis rails have been up-gauged significantly to handle this car’s additional capabilities. Ford has even delved into its Detroit parts catalogue to upgrade almost everything else underneath. It features a front differential from the Bronco Raptor, eight-stud wheel hubs from the F-250, and an upgraded version of the rear axle assembly from a Transit van, although with a unique and up-sized rear differential.
There is also a new transfer case, 130-litre fuel tank, and steel underbody protection which can pivot the entire weight of the vehicle.
Inside looks and feels like a regular Ranger. As mentioned, it comes with all the multimedia amenities and some of the luxuries like soft-touch finishes for anywhere your elbows are going to rest, although the abundance of hard plastics are notable.
Comfort is clearly a priority in the Shark 6 Premium. There’s loads of cabin space and the powered front seats are properly plush for a ute, with four-way lumbar support plus heating and ventilation which is a luxe touch you really notice on long drives.
Up front, storage is excellent with a glovebox and dash cubby, large door bins, a deep centre console, two phone trays with a wireless charger, a USB-A and C port, cupholders and a sunglasses holder. Everything has its place, and it’s easy to keep the cabin tidy.
The rear bench is also impressive. Generous seat bases, thick padding, and a flat floor mean adults will be comfortable back there, and kids are happy too. Rear passengers score map pockets, cupholders, big door bins, directional air vents, a USB-A and C port and even a 230-volt outlet.
Despite the 230mm ground clearance, getting in and out is surprisingly easy thanks to big door apertures, side steps and grab handles. My nine-year-old found it easy to get in, though younger kids will still need a hand. He loves the great view, thanks to the low window line, but the doors feel heavy on a slope.
Tech-wise, the 15.6-inch touchscreen looks sharp and responds quickly. The system is simple enough to use once you spend some quality time with it but first-timers might get flustered initially. Wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto worked consistently, although most controls live inside the screen, including climate functions, which may frustrate some. The rotating display is clever, but I found portrait mode blocked some forward vision from my driving position. Also, fun fact, when CarPlay fills the full screen, everyone can see it, including cyclists who now know my husband’s nickname!
Out back, the tray is slightly smaller than key rivals but still practical, offering 790kg payload and a 1200L capacity. The soft-opening tailgate is handy but lacks gas struts, and without a step, climbing in requires a bit of a hop. On the plus side, the tub gets lighting, three 230-volt AC outlets and a full-size spare underneath.
Practicality is what the Super Duty is all about, and it starts with the capacities. As already mentioned, this means a 4500kg GVM, which allows a payload of up to 1982kg (for the lightest single-cab variant), and up to 4500kg of towing capacity, and a total GCM of up to 8000kg.
The factory Cab Chassis tray was also part of the design from the beginning, and has dimensions to make the most of the footprint, measuring in at 2580mm x 1950mm for the Single Cab, 2130mm x 1950mm for the Super Cab, and 1830mm x 1950mm for the double cab.
The off-road dimensions are also strong, with an approach angle of 36.3 degrees, a departure angle of 29.3 degrees, and a breakover angle of 26.9 degrees (for the most capable Single Cab variant). Even the ground clearance is increased to between 295 and 299mm - larger in every direction over the standard model.
Wading depth is 850mm and a fully sealed Safari Snorkel comes standard on every body style. Plus, there are heavy-duty recovery hooks wherever you need them if you do end up getting stuck. The stock tyre is an all-terrain General Grabber, so most buyers won’t have to drive straight to a tyre shop either.
The choice of three body styles is excellent from the factory. One suited to every niche, while there are other commendable additions like the pre-drilled hard points in the dash for the fitment of equipment with a factory finish, as well as modern amenities like a full-size power outlet on the back of the centre console in every body style.
Plus, Ford has already reached out to the aftermarket so a range of accessories for both recreational buyers and its target fleet audience are already catered for at launch.
Perhaps the only detractor from what is otherwise a car that seems to cater to every need is the lack of a de-specified interior. With such tough intentions, I can see scenarios where the 12-inch touchscreen could be a liability, and cloth seats could easily get destroyed where a hard wearing vinyl trim isn’t an option.
The BYD Shark 6 arrives in a single, well-equipped Premium grade, priced at $57,900 before on-roads, making it the most affordable PHEV dual-cab ute you can buy right now. Its closest rival, the GWM Cannon Alpha Lux, is $2K more, and the next step up is the Ford Ranger XLT Hybrid from $71,990. So before you even look inside, the Shark 6 already offers strong value.
Standard equipment is generous for the money, with synthetic leather upholstery, powered heated and ventilated front seats, dual-zone climate control, full LED exterior lighting, wireless phone charging, four USB-C ports and a 360-degree camera system. You don’t get everything as there’s no sunroof or heated steering wheel but you don't miss them too much.
Inside, the tech looks properly premium. There’s a 15.6-inch touchscreen that swivels between portrait and landscape (although wireless Apple CarPlay sticks to landscape), wireless Android Auto, built-in sat-nav, a 10.25-inch digital driver’s display, a coloured head-up display, and a digital key via the BYD app.
On the practical side you’ll find keyless entry, push-button start and a full-size spare tyre. There are four 230-volt AC outlets, three of them in the tray, which is brilliant for camping, tradies, or powering kids’ gadgets at sport. BYD also includes a portable home charging cable, which is handy if you’re not ready to commit to a wallbox just yet.
The Super Duty name might be new to Australia, but it’s only worn by the most capable and work-ready Ford products overseas.
It doesn’t just mean off-road capability either, as is the case for the Raptor, it means something deeper, requiring significant upgrades under the skin to bring the Ranger’s GVM (gross vehicle mass) up to a whopping four-and-a-half tonnes, and the GCM (gross combination mass) climbing to a stratospheric eight tonnes.
This means the Super Duty is stepping into capability territory usually only occupied by right-hand drive converted American ‘full-size’ pick-ups, such as the Ram 1500, Chevrolet Silverado, and Ford’s own F-150, or even the Toyota LandCruiser 70 Series.
The good news is the Super Duty doesn’t cost near as much as the American full-sizers, which start at around $135,000. Instead, the new Ford starts from $82,990 before on-road costs for a Single Cab Chassis, with the Super Cab-Chassis stepping up to $86,490, and the Double Cab-Chassis topping out the range for now at $89,990.
All are diesel V6 powered 4x4s with independently locking front and rear differentials. More on those details later.
It’s worth noting those are before on-roads prices, but the options list is long and can get very expensive. See our story on accessory pricing for the Super Duty range here but even basic additions like the factory steel tray costs between roughly $6000-$10,000, depending on the finish selected.
The official ARB bull bar is also another six grand, although items which are expected to be commonly selected together are conveniently packaged up in the Adventure, Work, and Farm packs. Costs for these vary between nearly $8000 to $22,000, so the Super Duty can get super expensive super quickly.
Even with those options, the Super Duty isn’t a luxurious offering, with cloth seat trim, hard plastic dash and door finishes and vinyl flooring, although many conveniences from the rest of the Ranger line-up remain, like the 8.0-inch digital dash and 12-inch portrait multimedia display.
Ford argues the seats and refinement levels are an improvement over what most of its intended fleet audience are currently working with, in a thinly-veiled swipe at the comparatively ancient 70 Series.
For private buyers hoping for something a little more plush, an XLT grade both as a cab chassis and with a factory tub is also on the way later in 2026, featuring things like leather-trimmed seats and alloy wheels.
Also helping set the Super Duty apart is an array of clever conveniences for the intended purpose. For example, there’s built-in scales for measuring how close you are to this car’s enormous GVM, a smart hitch feature, which does the same thing but for optimised towing, pre-wired switches for auxiliary electronics in the roof console, and 18-inch truck-style steel wheels which are expressly designed to be bashed back into shape if they’re beaten up on the trails.
In some ways then, value is a buyer beware story. The Super Duty packs a range of awesome work-ready kit, and with option packs that are ready-to-go straight out of the box. However, it’s also expensive when everything is added up, so if you’re a private buyer, it’s worth asking if you really need the capability this thing offers.
The Shark 6 pairs a 1.5-litre four-cylinder turbo-petrol engine with two electric motors - one on each axle. On its own, the petrol engine makes 135kW/260Nm, but the hybrid system boosts total outputs to a more impressive 321kW and 650Nm.
Despite the strong numbers, braked towing capability sits at a low 2.5 tonnes, which is a full tonne less than key rivals. If you regularly haul larger caravans, horse floats or big trailers, that’s worth keeping in mind.
It’s also worth noting the Shark 6 runs an AWD system rather than a full 4WD, with no low-range gearing or diff locks. So while it’ll handle gravel roads, campsites and wet grass just fine, it’s not aimed at hardcore off-road buyers. For a deeper look at its rough-terrain performance, check out Crafty’s recent Adventure review.
Again, things don’t look too different from a regular Ranger under the bonnet, with the Super Duty maintaining the same 3.0-litre V6 turbo-diesel engine and 10-speed automatic transmission, but with some tweaks.
It has less power, producing 154kW (30kW less than the standard V6 Ranger), but maintaining the same 600Nm of torque, and it also has upgraded cooling to support load-lugging, with the front fan upgraded from 800W to 1000W.
The inverter is also 400W to support additional electrics, and mechanically there is a new transfer case, new front and rear differentials, upgraded CV shafts and main drive shaft, as well as an 18-inch brake package.
For emissions compliance, the Super Duty is equipped with both a DPF (diesel particulate filter) and AdBlue. But being conscious of the needs of many heavy-duty users, the brand has added a manual override for the DPF cycle so it doesn’t slow the vehicle down when full power is needed.
The same 4x4 auto system is employed, allowing automatic all-wheel drive to be applied in the standard driving mode. The differentials can be independently locked via the off-road menu in the touchscreen.
The tuning of this engine does make a tangible difference to the drive experience on the road, and while four cylinders are more prolific in the dual-cab space, the 3.0-litre V6 does what it can to bridge the gap between the more standard crop of turbo diesels and bigger V8s in American full-sizers.
Official combined fuel use for the Shark 6 in hybrid mode is 7.9L/100km, but after over 800km of mixed driving (starting with three-quarters charge and regen braking keeping the battery hovering around 25 per cent), I saw 8.9L/100km. So it’s a touch thirstier than the claim, but you’ll unlock its best efficiency when you charge daily and make full use of the 100km pure EV range for school runs, commuting and errands.
There is a 29.58kWh BYD Blade battery paired with a Type 2 CCS port. It takes up to 7kW on AC home charging and up to 55kW on a DC fast charger, where you can expect around 30 - 80 per cent in roughly 25 minutes. There’s also vehicle-to-load capability, so you can power tools, camping gear or larger tech items when you're out and about which is very handy for family trips and weekend adventures.
As a vehicle that slips into the category above the standard crop of dual-cabs, the Super Duty doesn’t wear an official fuel consumption number.
The story won’t be great. Anecdotally, as we were hopping in and out of several vehicles on this launch test, the computers were all showing over 12L/100km.
To be fair, we spent hours off-roading, towing, and driving in mixed countryside conditions, so hardly merciful, but we were also mostly unladen for the majority of the driving.
With a 130L fuel tank though, the Super Duty should still have plenty of driving range.
On the road, the Shark 6 is a bit of a mixed bag. In EV or hybrid mode it’s genuinely impressive being smooth, quiet and quick off the line with a nice, immediate power delivery. But once the petrol engine fires up, things change. It becomes noticeably loud and whiny, and it can feel short on grunt, especially on hills. I wouldn’t rely on the petrol side alone if you regularly drive with heavy loads or tackle steep country roads.
Around town, the ride is comfortable and almost glides over the road, which sounds lovely, but in a big ute I prefer a bit more feedback. Out on regional roads, the Shark can start to feel less composed, particularly over big bumps or loose gravel, so it’s definitely happier in urban settings.
Visibility is mostly good thanks to the high driving position and big windows. The thick B-pillar does require a proper head-check, and parents take note: I can’t always see my son when he’s right up close to the vehicle, so extra awareness around kids is essential.
Regen braking is subtle but effective and the battery never dipped below 20 per cent and often gained charge on downhill runs. The lack of that grabby EV brake feel is also very nice.
Parking, however, is where things get entertaining and not always in a good way. With a 13.5m turning circle and at almost 5.5m long, it’s not what you’d call nimble. My mum and I genuinely had an Austin Powers three-point-turn moment in a tight ramp. It's also best to reverse into spaces to allow for the tray overhang. The saving grace? The 360-degree camera system is genuinely helpful due to its clear, wide feed.
A lot of the experience of driving the Super Duty is familiar to the rest of the Ranger line-up. It feels comfortable and refined from behind the wheel, but certainly a size-up from its siblings.
For those who have driven any recent Ranger, this will be very good news. There’s not much about this vehicle that feels properly clattery like some light truck alternatives, and if you’ve driven a Raptor before, the pumped-up width and height will be familiar.
The brand has even managed to maintain an excellent steering tune which balances weight and feel, despite the differences to the hardware underneath. Even the ride quality, something Ranger is so well known for, has carried across to this model, despite significantly beefed-up components.
There is a degree of ladder-chassis jiggle to it, and if you throw some really rough terrain at it, the Super Duty will have the odd harsh moment, but on the whole it’s impressive what Ford has managed to do with such a significantly altered ute.
Over a long day of driving in harsh conditions, the seat quality proved to be comfortable, while ergonomics in the cabin are fairly robust, with a good driving position, physical dials for the climate unit, and easy manual adjustability.
The tweaked V6 engine is an interesting story. Unladen, off-the-road, and at commuter speeds it feels similar to the standard version, but things change when you throw different stress factors at it.
Stomping on the accelerator, for example, elicits a dulled response compared to the relatively athletic performance of the standard engine, with the 0-100km/h sprint (for all the good that will do the commercial audience) significantly impacted. We recorded a (not very scientific) 14.1 seconds.
When a lot is asked of it, either for overtaking scenarios or when laden, the engine creates a fair bit of noise and doesn’t seem to be in much of a hurry to go anywhere (even chugging up a hill at 60km/h with six tonnes combined across tray and trailer). But it’s the consistency and the throughput of the torque that's been focused on for this re-tune, which Ford says should keep the engine capable of doing these sorts of tasks all day.
The transmission isn't too busy or annoying, smoothly shifting through gears.
The Super Duty made light work of the off-road component of our test drive, making the real-world conditions feel easy, and the way it handled the more theoretically challenging staged tests was impressive, too. I’m not sure I’ve ever seen such articulation ability from a leaf-sprung rear suspension set-up, while the clearance angles also remained impressive.
Levels of grip on offer are also impressive from the stock tyre, which importantly also offers a hefty amount of sidewall for the more hairy stuff, and the traction systems doesn't seem to miss a beat.
Safety systems are tame on the country roads we took it on, barely skipping a beat, and are thankfully not at all annoying.
It is big though, so I can imagine parking in a city might not be easy (it’s already hard enough in a Raptor), so again, it’s worth asking if you need this kind of capability before you pull the trigger as a private buyer.
The BYD Shark 6 has a maximum five-star ANCAP safety rating from testing done in 2025 and is fitted with seven airbags, including a front centre airbag and curtain airbags that cover both rows, which is great to see on a family ute.
There’s a suite of safety equipment including big ticket items like forward and rear collision warning, front and rear cross-traffic alert and braking, blind spot monitoring, lane keeping aid, lane departure warning, intelligent seat belt warning, driver attention warning and a super clear 360-degree camera system.
However, some systems don’t always feel properly dialled in. Traffic sign recognition occasionally displays the wrong speed (once showing 150km/h) and the lane keeping aid is pushy. The adaptive cruise control is quick to slow down but slow to get back up to speed. It’s also worth noting that while it does have child presence detection, ANCAP says it falls below their required functionality limits, which is something to consider if you have kids.
There are two ISOFIX child seat mounts and two top tether anchor points, so you’ll only be fitting a maximum of two child seats in the rear row.
The autonomous emergency braking has car, cyclist, pedestrian and motorcycle detection and is operational from 4.0 - 150km/h but it is usual to see the top figure hover closer to 180km/h.
Overall, the Shark 6 offers strong baseline protection, but a few calibration quirks are needed.
The Super Duty will size-out of ANCAP’s gaze (for now), but it maintains the standard truck’s kit, which maintains its five-star rating awarded in 2022.
Standard features include auto emergency braking (AEB), lane support systems, blind spot monitoring, driver attention alert, and adaptive cruise, but there are also commercial vehicle rarities like front and rear parking sensors and a surround camera suite. There's even an array of nine airbags.
Again, there’s some thoughtfulness here. Ford has put extra time into making the 'Driver Assist Technology Bar' in the rear bumper both protected from off-road hits and designed to be as compatible as possible with the kinds of accessories which will be fitted, so its functions can be maintained. Even things like the 360-degree parking camera, which a 70 Series definitely doesn’t get.
And the mirrors are enormous, which helps with both the tray width and towing.
The BYD Shark 6 comes with a six-year/150,000km warranty, which is solid, though some rivals offer unlimited-kilometre terms and ongoing roadside assistance if you service through their dealer networks.
BYD provides a price guide for servicing rather than a fixed capped-price or pre-paid program, with average costs around $515 per service (subject to change). This method doesn't add the peace of mind its competitors do.
Finding somewhere to service your Shark 6 is fairly straightforward thanks to 46 BYD service centres across Australia, though most are concentrated in major cities. Regional owners will appreciate BYD’s partnership with select mycar Tyre and Auto service centres, which helps extend access outside metro areas.
Ford offers the same five-year and unlimited kilometre warranty as the rest of its range, and servicing, which is required once every 12 months or 15,000km, is capped price.
It costs $469 per visit for the first five years, which is more expensive than the standard Ranger ($379 per visit for four years, then $430 for the fifth), but it’s still not outrageously expensive (and not priced much differently from a HiLux when you consider that model's six-monthly service visits).