What's the difference?
US utes are becoming increasingly popular in Australia. And the Ford F-150 Lariat long wheelbase – the top dog in the F-150 line-up – is the latest arrival in America’s full-size pick-up invasion of Australia.
If you’re considering a US ute like the Ram, Chevrolet Silverado or even the upcoming Toyota Tundra, then the F-150 seems, on paper at least, well-engineered, well-equipped and purpose-built for towing and touring.
Americans love the F-150, so why shouldn’t we? But is it any good off-road?
Read on.
For some strange reason, the Isuzu D-Max isn't often mentioned on the list of Australia's most popular vehicles.
You hear all about the Ford Ranger and the Toyota HiLux, of course. And you hear about the Toyota RAV4 Hybrid, the Tesla Model Y and a handful of others, too.
But let's give the D-Max its flowers. Last year, it was Australia's third best-selling vehicle, shifting more than 31,000 units in 2023. And it moved another 7947 vehicles over the first three months of 2024. That makes it a proper sales behemoth.
So far, it's the only ute that's been able to maintain touching distance to the Ranger and HiLux, and the brand has some pretty big sales ambitions for the model for this year and beyond.
I tell you all of this as a way to say that this updated 2024 model is a Very Big Deal, not just for the brand, but for the legions of ute fans across the country.
What's fresh? There's a new look, better safety kit, a new permanent trim level, new off-road capability and a better cabin experience.
Is that enough to keep it in the hunt with the best-selling utes in the country? Let's go find out.
The Ford F-150 Lariat LWB is a big comfortable, purpose-built work and adventure machine – but it’s better suited to load-lugging, towing and touring, than it is to hard-core 4WDing.
Despite that – and its less-than-ideal payload – there’s a lot to like about the Lariat, especially its on-road performance, 4.5 tonne towing capacity and factory-backed warranty.
If you’re serious about buying a US ute the F-150 should be in your sights.
The new D-Max hasn’t been majorly overhauled and instead bundles together a whole bunch of small but important changes, all of which have been designed to keep it fresh in the face of its competition, like the Triton, Ranger and HiLux.
Has it done enough? Only time will tell. But there’s little doubt that these updates only improve the D-Max formula.
Note: CarsGuide attended this event as a guest of the manufacturer, with travel, accommodation and meals provided.
The long-wheelbase F-150 Lariat is 6184mm long (with a 3994mm wheelbase), 2030mm wide, 1995mm high and has a kerb weight of 2555kg.
With a stretched wheelbase and chunkified body everywhere you look, this F-150 looks and feels massive but, really, this is not a whole lot bigger than a Ranger, 300 Series LandCruiser, or a new-gen Patrol. It does, however, have an undeniably in-your-face presence.
For reference, the Ranger is 5370mm long, 1920mm wide, and 1880mm high; the LC300 (Sahara ZX) is 5015mm long, 1980mm wide, and 1950mm high; and the Patrol is 5165mm long (all variants), 1995mm wide (all variants) and 1940mm/1955mm high.
The Lariat’s 20-inch chrome-like alloys, shod with Pirelli Scorpion ATR all-terrain light truck tyres (275/60R20) cap off this US pick-up’s bulky style.
A lot of its notable design features are thoroughly functional rather than noteworthy because of their looks, so rather than include them in this section you'll find them in ‘Practicality’ (below).
There are some big-ish changes for this new-look D-Max, but how many of them you get depends on which of the six trim levels you’re shopping for.
Spring for one near the top of the family tree, and you’ll get all of the updates, which include new-look headlights that are LED with LED DRLs (but halogens on the SX), and a new-look front-end and grille. At the rear, there are new LED rear light clusters.
It doesn’t look a million miles away from the current D-Max, to be honest, but it does look a little newer, and a little fresher, which is important in the battle of the inches that is the new-ute market.
Inside, the brand describes the cabin as a mix of utility and comfort, and that’s feels pretty accurate from the driver’s seat.
The tech is new, with the 8.0- or 9.0-inch central screen joined by USB connection points, and there’s a new Digital Driver Display screen in the mix, along with new seat materials and trims, too.
But back to that that mix of utility and comfort. I’m not sure Isuzu has gotten the mix exactly right. There are plenty of soft-touch materials in the higher-trim levels, just not always where I want them to be.
I don’t know about you, but I like to have my elbow up when driving, and that plastic is still scratchy and hard, as is the place where my knee touches the centre console.
That said, it’s largely comfortable, definitely functional, and it serves up pretty much exactly what you might expect.
The interior of the F-150 is cavernous, but it’s functional and comfortable with a definite premium look and feel about it all.
From the front of the cabin to the rear, this space is geared towards being practical.
For one, the multi-media system is easy to pair to your phone and operate. Just allow yourself a few minutes before you set off in the Lariat for the first time so you can get your head around how to navigate your way through the system.
There’s ample storage space – including a deep centre console*, cupholders and bottle-holders for everyone, as well as the usual glove box (times two) and seat pockets for rear-seat passengers.
*In a stroke of Ford genius, the auto shifter power-folds forward into a recess, giving you room to unfold the lid of the centre console and turn that large surface into a picnic table or work desk.
Space is further maximised in the rear 60/40-split seat as it has a fold-out storage area underneath it, or the seat itself, if not in use, can be stowed away to free up even more room in the cabin.
The stretched Lariat’s tub is 2005mm long and 1656mm wide with 1285mm between the wheel-arches – so it will fit an Aussie pallet, or a quad bike, camping gear etc.
This load space also has a 12-volt outlet, night lights, a tub camera (which I couldn’t get to work), a durable-looking spray-in tub liner, as well as fixed tie-down points at each corner and four sidewall-mounted tie-down points (two on each inner wall).
Remember I mentioned some design features that err on the side of practical rather than pretty? I’m talking about this F-150’s chunky side-steps, which serve an obvious practical function, and its remote-controlled and power-assisted tailgate (a nifty feature), its fold-out step (a real handy addition) and the accompanying slide-out guide pole for something secure to hold onto as you climb in and out of the tub – well, that’s what we used it for anyway, whether that’s its intended purpose or not.
Bonus usage points for the raised ruler markings on the inner wall of the tailgate and the two G-clamp fitting positions at each side of the tailgate’s top edge.
The Lariat even has a keyless entry system with a keypad on the exterior of the vehicle (front passenger door). Punch in your permanent access code and bingo, you're in!
Isuzu has taken to calling the D-Max one of Australia’s most capable utes out of the box.
That includes up to 240mm in ground clearance, 800mm in wading depth, and a towing maximum of 3.5 tonnes for the bigger diesel engine, dropping to three tonnes with the 1.9-litre powerplant fitted. Payload is up to 1405kg, too, but to get you need the SX with Cab Chassis. It’s more like 1045kg for most dual-cab ute trims.
Also new for this update is the addition of Rough Terrain Mode — a technology borrowed from the MU-X, then improved to pair with the D-Max’s mechanical off-road features.
In short, the tech taps into the traction-control systems to detect wheel slip, and can then brake individual wheels and send torque to where it is needed to smooth your progress. In the D-Max, it works with the rear diff-lock, too.
The back seat of the D-Max shows why vehicles in this category are now doubling as family vehicles. Behind my own 175cm driving position there was enough knee and headroom to get comfortable, and I’m confident you could fit three across the back row pretty easily, too.
There are some creature comforts, including a USB-C charging point (trim dependent) as well as air vents, but no temp controls, and even a little coat hook as well, but it’s not swimming with niceties.
There are two F-150 spec levels in Australia – the XLT and the Lariat – and both are available as a short- or long-wheelbase.
Our test vehicle is the Lariat long wheelbase. It’s a five-seat dual-cab ute with a price-tag of $140,945 (excluding on-road costs). The XLT is about $33,000 cheaper.
Standard features include a 12.0-inch touchscreen-based multimedia system (with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto), heated and ventilated leather-accented seats, a two-panel power moonroof, 20-inch chrome-like alloy wheels, front and rear parking sensors, a cabin-length power-operated sunroof, a remote-controlled and power-assisted tailgate and more.
Exterior paint choices include 'Oxford White' (at no extra cost) or 'Agate Black', 'Iconic Silver', 'Rapid Red' (on our test vehicle), 'Antimatter Blue' or 'Carbonised Grey' – each costing $700.
Ute ranges being the insanely complex webs they are, you’ll be unsurprised to hear there are lots of options here. In fact, there are some 25 combinations, spanning six grades, two engines, two gearboxes, a choice of two- or four-wheel drive and four body styles.
The price range is vast, too, now starting at $32,700 for the SX Single Cab Chassis with a 1.9-litre turbo-diesel and two-wheel drive, and climbing to a $70,500 MSRP for the X-Terrain Crew Cab with a 3.0-litre turbo-diesel and four-wheel drive.
To keep this brief, we'll focus on the Crew Cab Ute, which is yours in SX, LS-U, LS-U+, LS-M, X-Rider and X-Terrain guises, but we will also post a full price list below so you can choose your own adventure.
The SX range is now $500 more expensive across the board, and it starts at $42,700 with a 1.9-litre engine and two-wheel drive, or $50,700 for four-wheel drive. If you want the bigger 3.0-litre powerplant, it’s $44,700 for the 2WD, or $52,700 for the 4x4.
Then it’s the LS-U, which is big-engine only, and is $54.5k (which is up by $1500, by the way) for the 4x2, and $62.5k (again up $1.5k) for the 4x4. There’s also a LS-U+, which is $65,500 in 4x4.
Next is the LS-M, which is $55,800 (up $500), before the new-for-2024 X-Rider jumps in at $59,500. Both are four-wheel drive only and feature only the big engine.
Finally, there’s the flagship X-Terrain — big engine only, and four-wheel drive as standard — which is $70,500 (up a sizeable $3k), but which is also just $67,990 drive-away, at least for now.
The entry-level SX gets a vinyl floor, cloth seats, powered windows and mirrors, and air-conditioning with rear vents. Tech is handled by a new 8.0-inch central touchscreen with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, pairing with four speakers, while an also-new 4.2-inch screen sits in the driver’s binnacle. You also get 17-inch steel wheels, automatic wipers and halogen headlights.
Stepping up to LS-M trim gets you new and softer rear suspension, a higher-grade cloth interior treatment, bi-LED headlights and DRLs, 17-inch alloy wheels and body-coloured mirrors, door handles and tailgate handle. If you can spring for this trim, it feels like the sweet spot of the lower-range models.
Next there’s the new X-Rider, which was once was a special edition but now rejoins as a permanent member of the family. It’s all about upping the street credibility, so there’s black gloss on the grille and a black underbody spoiler, as well as black on the rear step bar, the mirrors, door handles and tailgate handle, the B-pillars, the sports bar and on the soft tonneau cover. There are also black 17-inch alloy wheels and dark grey side steps.
Next up is the LS-U, which ups the cabin tech with a new 9.0-inch central screen, but with tactile dials for volume — fixing what was apparently a big complaint about the outgoing D-Max – as well as a new 7.0-inch Driver Display. There’s also keyless entry and push-button start, including a new welcome light that illuminates the interior when you approach, dual-zone climate control and a nicer interior treatment. Outside, there’s a tub liner, silver side steps, chrome on the handles and mirrors and 18-inch alloys.
The LS-U+ then adds leather seats which are heated in the front and eight-way power-adjustable for the driver, and four-way power-adjustable for the front passenger.
Finally, the flagship X-Terrain gets red stitching across its leather interior, remote engine start, a rolling tonneau cover, a unique sport bar, dark grey side steps, mirrors, handles and roof rails, and 18-inch matte-grey alloys wheels.
2024 Isuzu D-MAX Pricing (RRP before on-road costs unless specified)
The F-150 has a 3.5-litre twin-turbo petrol V6 producing 298kW at 6000rpm and 678Nm at 3100rpm, and that’s matched to a 10-speed automatic transmission.
This is an impressive set-up – the long wheelbase F-150 is punchy off the mark, smooth and refined at highway speeds – it just trucks along – and overall it offers a comfortable and controlled driving experience.
This top-spec F-150 – the Lariat – also has full-time 4WD and an electronic rear diff lock.
Its selectable driving modes include 'Sport', 'Eco', 'Tow/Haul', 'Normal', 'Slippery', 'Deep Snow/Sand' and 'Mud Ruts'.
The D-Max’s powertrains for 2024 remain unchanged, with the choice of a 1.9-litre turbo-diesel four-cylinder engine good for 110kW and 350Nm, or a 3.0-litre unit producing 140kW and 450Nm. They are paired with either a six-speed manual or six-speed automatic, and two- or four-wheel drive, depending on the model.
The Ford F-150 Lariat LWB has an official fuel consumption figure of 12.5L/100km (on a combined, urban/extra-urban, cycle).
I recorded 14.8L/100km on this test which included a lot of high- and low-range 4WDing although the F-150 was never working hard.
This F-150 has a 136L fuel tank, so, going by my on-test fuel-consumption figure, you could reasonably expect a driving range of about 920km from a full tank.
If you calculate driving range using the official fuel-consumption figure that number extends to 1088km from a full tank.
Isuzu reckons you’ll see around 8.0L/100km on the combined cycle with the bigger engine, with fuel use dropping to 6.9L/100km with the 1.9-litre unit fitted.
The 76-litre tank is the same for both engines, meaning a theoretical range of 950km or 1100km.
F-150s are imported to Australia from the USA as left-hand-drive vehicles and reengineered to right-hand-drive by Melbourne-based RMA Automotive, at the company’s production facility.
The utes undergo an exhaustive transformation including changes to steering, driver displays, air con, as well as software upgrades, to mention a few, all aimed at making them capable of excelling in Aussie conditions.
And RMA Automotive has done an impressive job.
The F-150 is, by its very nature, a big vehicle with a steel ladder-frame chassis and a lengthy wheelbase, but it suits Aussie conditions, especially with Aussie-tuned steering, great on-road ride and handling and that 4500kg towing capability built into it.
It's well-controlled with a solid, planted feel on sealed surfaces, the steering has a nice weight to it in all conditions, acceleration is smooth (and punchy when needed) and the 10-speed auto offers clever management of this big vehicle.
It’s also very comfortable and quiet in the cabin. You can just barely register the low-level rumble of the twin-turbo V6 as you truck along stretches of highway and rural backroads.
All in all, on-road this is an almost perfect open-road touring vehicle. The bonus is, as a Lariat driver, you have access to a whole suite of driver-assist tech which specifically includes stuff geared towards making the task of towing safer, more controlled and, as a result, more enjoyable than it otherwise may be.
However, when you get this big ute off road, you quickly discover it has limitations. Those limitations don’t come close to ruining the F-150’s potential as an adventure machine, but this is a substantial vehicle so it has to be driven with real consideration, real care, and you have to know the off-road parameters in which this ute works best.
If you drive anything more severe than light-to-medium-duty off-roading you're risking damage to this ute’s side steps or underbody.
The F-150’s size is not a factor when the tracks are nice and wide, but when the tracks become narrower, more treed-in, it becomes more difficult to navigate through those routes.
The Lariat’s suspension – IFS (twin wishbone) with coil springs at the front and live axle on leaf springs at the rear – is well set up to soak up lumps and bumps on sealed surfaces and even on gravel tracks, but it is less capable of doing the same job during low-range 4WDing.
It becomes very bouncy, when you’d be excused for expecting that longer wheelbase would offer a bit more stability and control through shallow to moderate ruts, but it really is a wild ride.
Beyond that, though, visibility is great, the driving position is commanding, steering at low speeds is well-weighted and precise and throttle response is impressive.
While there’s little to nit-pick in terms of the four-wheel drive system onboard this ute, the traction control system is somewhat clunky.
When the terrain becomes more challenging, that off-road traction control system just seems to whirr and click and clunk away with lacklustre application – it’s not exactly smooth or seamless.
The F-150 has the kind of off-road angles you’d expect for a vehicle this large: approach angle is listed as 24 degrees, departure angle is 26.3 and the ramp-over is 19 degrees.
Ground clearance is listed as 225mm and wading depth is 600mm.
The tyres – Pirelli Scorpion ATR all-terrain light truck tyres (275/60R20) – aren’t that good for off-roading, either, even though they’re marketed as all-season tyres.
Bigger tyres and an aftermarket suspension lift would go some of the way to help sort out the F-150’s issues with less-than-ideal rubber as well as poor ground clearance and off-road angles.
For such a big ute, payload is an underwhelming 710kg; for reference, the Ram 1500 (878kg) and Chevrolet Silverado (757kg) offer more, and even mainstream dual-cab utes, such as the Ford Ranger (966kg (kerb weight)/1010kg (min kerb weight) offer better payloads.
Towing capacity is 750kg (unbraked) and a noteworthy 4500kg (braked). GVM is 3265kg, and GCM is 7765kg.
Remember, it’s evolution over revolution for the 2024 Isuzu D-Max, so don’t expect the drive experience to be dramatically different.
Instead, the brand says it has focused on fixing some of the complaints surrounding the outgoing model, something Isuzu is pretty open about.
It says they’ve taken feedback from the media, from their customers, and from their big fleet users, and they’ve fed it up their Japanese HQ. And the result of all that is this 2024 update.
Apparently one of the biggest complaints focused on the infotainment screen having no physical buttons, but the new one changes that with its wireless Apple CarPlay and twin USB connection points joined by a physical volume dial. I know that feels a little like you’ve taken a step backwards through time, but when something works, it works.
The’ve also made some key, and worthy, changes to the safety systems, but we will get to those in a moment.
The reality is — and I don’t mean this in an insulting way — that the new D-Max largely drives much like you might expect a top-selling diesel dual-cab to drive.
The torque on offer from both engines, but especially the bigger one, is plentiful, even if the noise of the diesel is an ever-present passenger when you put your foot down, and there is that inescapable truck-like feeling from behind the wheel.
There are some elements that set it apart, though. The steering is smooth and responsive, as is the quick-witted automatic gearbox, and despite us tipping into corners a little faster than we would on our daily commute, there wasn’t much in the way of side-to-side body roll, and no complaints from the rubber.
That might sound like I’m damning the D-Max with faint praise, but that’s not the intention. It’s a comfortable, capable, practical workhorse, and that’s ticking plenty of ute boxes, right?
The bigger-engined D-Max remains a towing powerhouse, too. We pulled some serious weight, and 3.0-litre turbo-diesel made pretty light work of it, with ample torque on offer to keep things moving.
It wouldn’t be the launch of an updated diesel dual-cab without a tour across a tailored off-road course, and Isuzu delivered, specifically to plug the merits of its new Rough Terrain Mode.
Tested back-to-back with the system switched on and off, there does seem to be less slip from the wheels when traversing bumpy, tyre-torturing articulations, with the D-Max just gripping and going. It’s another off-road tick for a ute already very good in the rough stuff.
The F-150 does not have an ANCAP safety rating because it has not been tested.
As standard it has six airbags (driver and front passenger front and side airbags, plus side-curtain) and top-tether points for child seats/baby capsules on the three rear seat positions.
Driver-assist tech includes AEB, blind-spot monitoring, lane-keeping assist, front and rear parking sensors, tyre-pressure monitoring, a 360-degree camera view, trailer sway control, dynamic hitch assist, back-up assist, trailer light check and trailer theft alert.
Full credit to Isuzu for equipping the entire D-Max range with the best of its safety equipment, much of which has been overhauled for this generation.
That starts with a new-generation camera that scans the road for cars, pedestrians and cyclists with greater clarity. It also includes a charging plug for an aftermarket dash-cam.
There’s now updated Lane Keep Assist, better programmed to centre in the lane rather than bouncing from edge to edge, bumper bowling style. There’s Rear Cross-Traffic Alert and Brake and Adaptive Cruise Control, too.
That fact that it’s all standard from the entry-level SX is fantastic, and the D-Max range copped the full five-star ANCAP rating when tested in 2020.
The F-150 has a five-year/unlimited km warranty and you may pick up roadside assistance for up to seven years but it's worth noting not all Ford Dealers participate in providing the latter.
Servicing is scheduled for every 12 months or 15,000km. Capped price servicing applies to the first four scheduled services and, at time of writing, was listed as $429 a pop which isn't outrageous for a vehicle of this magnitude.
The D-Max is covered by Isuzu’s six-year, 150,000km warranty, and we like the years, but less so the kilometre limits.
There’s five years of capped-price servicing, too. You’ll be visiting the service centre every 12 months or 15,000kms, and each visit will cost you $449 for the first five years, or $2245 in total.