Chevrolet Corvette vs Isuzu NPS

What's the difference?

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Chevrolet Corvette
Chevrolet Corvette

2025 price

Isuzu NPS
Isuzu NPS

$96,558 - $133,527

2026 price

Summary

2025 Chevrolet Corvette
2026 Isuzu NPS
Safety Rating

Engine Type
V8, 5.5L

Diesel Turbo 4, 5.2L
Fuel Type
Premium Unleaded Petrol

Diesel
Fuel Efficiency
0.0L/100km (combined)

0.0L/100km (combined)
Seating
2

3
Dislikes
  • So low and so wide makes city driving stressful
  • Warranty is short
  • Constantly tripping over the front splitter

  • Left-foot braking impossible
  • No recreational aspirations
  • Needs plenty of space to park
2025 Chevrolet Corvette Summary

Chevrolet’s Corvette Z06 supercar is an all-American answer to European rivals Lamborghini and Ferrari, but it’s not just this that makes it so appealing.

Spending a week with the most potent Corvette you can get in Australia has left me with a list of notes on this beast I want to hand over to you. Maybe it will help make your mind up about it or change your mind.

What makes the Z06 the flagship of the Australian Corvette range isn’t little luxuries, but seriously upgraded mechanical hardware, much of it track focussed.

Our test car was also fitted with the Z07 Performance package which adds a carbon-fibre aero kit to pin the Corvette down at high speed while also drawing everybody’s attention to it.

Oh, and then there’s the sound of the largest flatplane crank V8 ever to go into a production car… and look out for your ankles - let me explain…

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2026 Isuzu NPS Summary

The dual-cab ute market and light truck market are potentially two very different landscapes.

While the dual-cab continues to storm the sales charts in Australia, there’s also a growing awareness among hardcore users of these vehicles, that a light truck might often be a better solution.

Better payloads and higher Gross Combination Mass ratings in an age of increasing legal and insurance concerns over overloaded vehicles, were once the light truck’s strong suit. But these days, vehicles like the full-sized US-made pick-ups and even the muscled-up Ford Ranger Super Duty have bridged or even exceeded that gap.

At which point, the light-truck’s benefits become the ease with which it can take on heavier jobs and the sheer size of the cargo and cabin area, not to mention those truck-specific qualities born of generations of refining a concept.

In Australia, it’s Isuzu that absolutely brains the opposition in sales terms. And part of the reason for that has been a realisation that not all would-be buyers want the hassle of the traditional truck-buying process of purchasing a bare chassis and then equipping it so suit their needs.

Which is where Isuzu’s RTW (ready To Work) concept comes in. You simply choose the truck you want, choose a tray, van or service body and then let Isuzu deal with it and phone you when it’s ready to collect.

It's so simple, it’s a wonder not everybody is doing it.

@carsguide.com.au Future of reversing cameras revealed! This 2026 Isuzu N Series feature is potentially lifesaving #isuzu #nseries #truck #tradies #fyp ♬ original sound - CarsGuide.com.au

The other news is that Isuzu has finally updated its popular N Series fleet after about 16 years. A new cabin, extensive chassis changes, uprated engines, and all-new transmission, improved suspension and a new focus on safety are all headlines. But 16 years is a long time between drinks, so do the improvements make enough of a difference to keep the concept relevant in a changing market?

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Deep dive comparison

2025 Chevrolet Corvette 2026 Isuzu NPS

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