MR_Y
Well-known member
Hi,
A family member (over 60) is considering an almost new 2020 Isuzu D-MAX 250 Hi-Rider D/Cab Auto.
This is the 100kw/320Nm version, not the "fleet" spec 2.5 version (58kw or so). By the way, said family member does have that fleet spec version as his staff vehicle.
Previous bakkie was an NP300 2.5TDI manual (it was written off recently - those reports on safety issues on these vehicles are true).
Bakkie is to be used on mainly (steep) gravel roads, with occasional (say, 30% of the time) highway use. The vehicle may be laden occasionally - oil drums and mechanical parts.
Being the resident "car guy" in the family, I was asked for my views.
Being a non-bakkie guy, I do not feel I am too qualified to make an informed opinion - so, I am asking for advice on this forum.
Through a process of elimination, my thoughts are:
- I feel that a Ranger 2.2 Auto may be too modern for this application and may not be robust enough for this particular use case. Also, can it survive on a diet of 500ppm diesel?
- The Hilux 2.4 Auto is a solid choice, but you cannot squeeze dealers as hard as you can for a discount compared to an Isuzu. Also, I feel that the Hilux has become more SUV-like instead of a workhorse.
- The Triton is another contender, but no dealer support in the buyer's location
- Mahindra Pik-up/Scorpio is maybe too hardcore and does not come in Auto. (Note the Auto requirement for the buyer is due to health reasons).
- Nissan does not make a Navara at the D-Max price-point, so that rules it out.
I think the D-Max is a solid choice, based on a process of eliminating the competition above.
Budget is R400k and for business/tax/VAT? reasons, that I don't fully understand, the vehicle has to be a 2020 model with low mileage.
Thanks.
A family member (over 60) is considering an almost new 2020 Isuzu D-MAX 250 Hi-Rider D/Cab Auto.
This is the 100kw/320Nm version, not the "fleet" spec 2.5 version (58kw or so). By the way, said family member does have that fleet spec version as his staff vehicle.
Previous bakkie was an NP300 2.5TDI manual (it was written off recently - those reports on safety issues on these vehicles are true).
Bakkie is to be used on mainly (steep) gravel roads, with occasional (say, 30% of the time) highway use. The vehicle may be laden occasionally - oil drums and mechanical parts.
Being the resident "car guy" in the family, I was asked for my views.
Being a non-bakkie guy, I do not feel I am too qualified to make an informed opinion - so, I am asking for advice on this forum.
Through a process of elimination, my thoughts are:
- I feel that a Ranger 2.2 Auto may be too modern for this application and may not be robust enough for this particular use case. Also, can it survive on a diet of 500ppm diesel?
- The Hilux 2.4 Auto is a solid choice, but you cannot squeeze dealers as hard as you can for a discount compared to an Isuzu. Also, I feel that the Hilux has become more SUV-like instead of a workhorse.
- The Triton is another contender, but no dealer support in the buyer's location
- Mahindra Pik-up/Scorpio is maybe too hardcore and does not come in Auto. (Note the Auto requirement for the buyer is due to health reasons).
- Nissan does not make a Navara at the D-Max price-point, so that rules it out.
I think the D-Max is a solid choice, based on a process of eliminating the competition above.
Budget is R400k and for business/tax/VAT? reasons, that I don't fully understand, the vehicle has to be a 2020 model with low mileage.
Thanks.