Holden Colorado Video Reviews
Holden Colorado 2020 review: Z71 towing
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By Marcus Craft · 28 Apr 2020
Australians have a deep passion for the outdoors and utes make great adventure-lifestyle vehicles. Utes are increasingly being used as recreational tow vehicles so their ability to safely haul loads is a crucial part of their appeal. So, in a market chock-full of utes, is the Holden Colorado Z71 a worthy towing machine?
Holden Colorado Z71 Xtreme 2018 off-road review
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By Matt Campbell · 19 Sep 2018
The new Holden Colorado Z71 Xtreme takes the top-spec ute and adds a lot of hard-core extras. But does it transform the drive experience? And is it worth the cash? Let's find out.
Holden Colorado 4WD 2012 review
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By Bill Buys · 13 Jun 2012
Holden has given its Colorado a Brazilian for 2013, with the vehicle emerging bigger, tougher and more sophisticated than before - and a lot better-looking too.Carefully designed to tread the fine balance between weekday workhorse and weekend warrior, it claims class-leading towing and serious 4WD capabilities with spacious cabins and lots of safety and comfort features.The new macho-faced Colorado was designed in Brazil, is built in Thailand and has undergone 2.5million km of development in five continents.Colorado comes in three body styles: singe cab, space cab and crew cab, four spec levels in DX, LX, LT and LTZ, two and four-wheel drive and power is by a new Duramax 2.5-litre turbo-diesel in the base DX single cab and a 2.8-litre turbodiesel in the rest.The 2.5-litre unit delivers 110kW and 350Nm while the 2.8-litre produces a lusty 132kW and 470nm. The motor is built at GM's new facility in Thailand and has the sophistication of common-rail injection and a variable geometry turbo. All Colorados are diesel-powered, all can handle a one-tonne payload and the 2.8-litre models have a towing capacity of 3.5tonnes. Transmission is a five-speed manual or an optional six-speed auto.Fuel economy is pretty impressive too: the 4x2 DX 2.5 returns 7.9litres/100km and we had no trouble bettering the claimed 9.0 in a top-of-the-Wozza LTZ 4x2 auto on a 200km run in country Queensland, with the computer indicating 8.5litres/100km.All models get ABS with EBD and stability control, twin front and full-length curtain airbags, aircon, aux power outlets, Bluetooth and iPod connectivity. LTZ has projector headlights, fog lights, an alloy sports bar, power seats, an eight-speaker audio system, 17inch alloys and leather and chrome highlights.The dash has twin glove boxes in its vast black plastic surface, with instruments in a neat binnacle. Seating and visibility are plus factors.These vehicles are frequently a family's one and only, and GM has opted to retain the basic leaf spring set-up at the back to handle loads. The front has an independent suspension with double wishbones and coils, and the compromise made our stint in a DX pretty firm compared to the luxurious LTZ, but the difference appears due to the extra weight of the LTZ.The 2.8-litre motor puts out 10 per cent more power and 40per cent more torque than the earlier 3.0-litre and it gives the vehicle good, smooth performance. The auto gearbox is a honey. Best too for offroad work.