Toyota Tundra ute leaves HiLux in its dust
Built to do more than conventional utes can manage, this massive American pick-up truck aims to conquer Australian roads.
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Everything about the new Toyota Tundra is large.
Bigger in every dimension than the Toyota HiLux, the Tundra is a chunk of Texan metal engineered for the land where too much just ain’t enough.
When the team developing this Tundra bought a 15-year-old example back from a customer, the truck had racked up more than 1.6 million kilometres with a six-foot-six, 190kg man behind the wheel.
This really is a big car for a big country.
Built to tackle the Ford F-150, Chevrolet Silverado and RAM 1500, the Tundra is Toyota’s flagship model in the United States. The drive to bring it to Australia is the result of engineers from three continents working for more than five years to make it happen.
It represents a big investment on Toyota’s part.
Engineers used parts from the latest Toyota LandCuiser and its Lexus LX cousin to convert the Tundra from left to right-hand-drive in partnership with Walkinshaw Automotive in Melbourne.
And it’s still not a sure thing.
About 300 customers will lease Tundras for a year to ensure the conversion process is sound. Famously conservative management at the Japanese giant do not want to risk Toyota’s reputation for reliability being unravelled by a third-party conversion, so the car will not be sold to the public until it has been on trial for at least 12 months.
Teething trouble for Ford’s F-150 conversion effort suggests they might be onto something.
The delay is one reason Toyota has not published a retail price for the car.
Customers in the Tundra trial pay $2500 per month, which includes servicing, registration fees and comprehensive insurance.
The first batch combines the range-topping hybrid motor with mid-range Tundra Limited features sold for about $US57,000 drive-away ($85,000) in the states.
If US prices are any indication, it should sit between the F-150 XLT ($117,000 drive-away) and F-150 Lariat ($151,000) pick-ups found in Ford showrooms, but we reckon it will top the $150,000 drive-away figure of high-end LandCruiser wagons. After all, the Tundra is pitched at folks who have outgrown the LandCruiser.
Rated to pull almost 5.5 tonnes in the US, the Tundra is reduced to 4.5 tonnes in Australia so customers need not upgrade to a truck licence.
We put Toyota’s towing claim to the test with a 4.5-tonne payload in controlled conditions at a proving ground and came away impressed by its stability when hauling.
Wider, longer and heavier than a HiLux, the Tundra feels planted at highway speed.
It isn’t easily swayed and there are reassuring responses to the steering and brakes.
Different driving modes adjust its behaviour when towing, working with the engine, transmission, safety systems and electronically controlled front spoiler to deliver fuss-free progress.
The Tundra has a similar twin-turbocharged 3.5-litre V6 to the LandCruiser-based Lexus LX 600, but adds 36kW and 250Nm of hybrid thrust to take combined outputs to 326kW and 790Nm.
A slick 10-speed automatic does a great job choosing the right gear and switchable four-wheel-drive works well off-road.
We’d like to see full-time all-wheel-drive but Toyota reckons customers prefer the lower highway fuel consumption offered by rear-drive traction on tar.
There’s no official fuel use figure for Australia. Toyota claims 14.1L/100km in the states, though that feels optimistic because it is truly enormous.
It’s wide enough that three blokes can sit in the back seat without their hips or shoulders touching, and long enough that leg room is luxuriant in the front and rear.
It won’t have an ANCAP rating in Australia, but a fat list of safety features helped it earn “top safety pick” credentials from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) in the US – something no other car in its class can claim.
The 14-inch central screen is a whopper, loaded with everything from satnav to smartphone mirroring.
There’s also an impressive 360-degree camera with multiple viewing angles to assist parking manoeuvres. You’ll need it – this is a really big car.
TOYOTA TUNDRA LIMITED
PRICE: Expected to be about $150,000 drive-away
ENGINE: 3.5-litre twin-turbo V6 hybrid, 326kW and 790Nm
WARRANTY: Five-yr/u’ltd km
SAFETY: Eight airbags, auto emergency braking, active cruise control, blind-spot monitoring, lane-keep assist, rear cross-traffic alert
THIRST: Not available
PAYLOAD: 4.5-tonne towing, 758kg
SPARE: Full-size
Originally published as Toyota Tundra ute leaves HiLux in its dust