Industry news

Ford's new EV ute to be cheaper than Ranger
By Tom White · 12 Aug 2025
Ford says its revolutionary new electric ute will be cheaper than Ranger, less barebones than Slate Auto rival.
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Why the 2026 Kia Tasman hybrid is the top priority
By Byron Mathioudakis · 12 Aug 2025
Where does the Kia Tasman go from here? Is having a conventional diesel engine as the sole choice enough to run with the best-sellers? Should the Tasman follow the lead of the Ranger Raptor by going down the off-road performance path, to create a halo model for the rest of the range to bask beneath? Or is going hybrid the answer? The answer may shock you!
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BYD's plan to fix its biggest flaw
By Dom Tripolone · 11 Aug 2025
Business is booming at BYD, but it is starting to experience some major growing pains.
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SUV has more power than eight Toyota Corollas combined
By Dom Tripolone · 11 Aug 2025
Premium Chinese brand Zeekr is on a roll and could launch a pair of SUVs hot on the hells of the new 7X.
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Kia sticks with its pioneering seven-year warranty
By Byron Mathioudakis · 11 Aug 2025
Kia will stick with its present warranty in Australia for the foreseeable future. With three manufacturers – Mitsubishi, MG and most recently Nissan – introducing conditional, dealer-service-activated 10-year options on top of their existing standard five-year timeframes, the modern-era long-warranty standard setter reckons stretching from its long-running seven-year/unlimited-kilometre item isn’t actually what buyers want or need.
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New Toyota HiLux to feed toughened up Fortuner
By Andrew Chesterton · 10 Aug 2025
The 2026 Toyota HiLux continues to take shape, with leaks and design sketches now paving the way for a next-generation Toyota Fortuner to take the fight to the hot-selling Ford Everest.
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Nissan set to return to two-pronged Navara strategy
By Byron Mathioudakis · 09 Aug 2025
From one of the oldest utes in Australia to two of the newest – and most technically-intriguing. This is what is shaping up for Nissan locally moving forward, as it shifts up two gears to regain the much-stronger standing it enjoyed for decades against the best-selling Toyota HiLux, Ford Ranger and Isuzu D-Max. That's right, two utes to take on the tough one-tonne class.
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Sorry diesel diehards, your favourite fuel is dead
By Andrew Chesterton · 09 Aug 2025
Diesel as a fuel source might not be dead yet, but the vultures are circling, waiting for their prey to finally stop moving. Don’t believe me? It doesn’t take a crystal ball to see into a future already so clearly laid out, and not just by newcomer brands, but by some of the biggest proponents of diesel engines in the history of the fuel.
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Ford Ranger Super Duty cops the 'mud test from hell'
By James Cleary · 08 Aug 2025
It’s widely regarded as a great way to exfoliate, detoxify and hydrate the skin, while some believe it can provide relief from muscle and joint pain. But the type of mud bath Ford Australia has been applying to its up-coming Ford Ranger Super Duty is far from a therapeutic beauty routine.
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HiLux in trouble from new ute from unexpected source
By Dom Tripolone · 08 Aug 2025
Two automotive powerhouses are joining forces to wage an assault on the mid-size ute segment.Hyundai and General Motors (GM) are officially co-developing five new cars, including a mid-size ute that would put it on a collision course with the most popular options in Australia, such as the Toyota HiLux and Ford Ranger.Such a ute could revive the Colorado name in Australia, which was last worn by GM’s former brand Holden.Hyundai Australia has recently gone on the record stating it will offer a ute in the near future, but hasn’t revealed what that might be.Hyundai Australia CEO Don Romano told CarsGuide everything is on the table, from reusing the Kia Tasman platform to leveraging its partnership with GM to produce what could be a modern Hyundai version of something like the Colorado.The latter could be the vehicle that comes into Australia to help it stand apart from sibling brand Kia’s Tasman.Reuters reported the Hyundai/GM partnership will develop a ute for Central and South America with petrol and hybrid options. It is planning to launch the vehicle in 2028. That doesn’t sound like the vehicle is destined for Australian shores, but the partnership is targeting production of 800,000 utes a year, which could bolster its export chances.Chief Investment Officer at Seoul-based hedge fund Billionfold Asset Management, An Hyung-jin, told Reuters the new ute will struggle to compete with cut-price Chinese rivals.BYD already has a big foothold in South America, where it has just started producing vehicles in Brazil.BYD’s Shark 6 plug-in hybrid ute has made an immediate impact in Australia, and more Chinese utes from Chery, Geely, LDV and MG are headed our way.
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