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9 8

E L E C T R I C A L CO N N E C T I O N

S UMM E R 2 0 16

TRANSPORT

with Terry Martin

Holden is confident its heavily upgraded Colorado ute will

now take the fight up to the top-selling Toyota HiLux and Ford

Ranger in the ultra-competitive one-tonne utility segment,

touting significant Australian engineering work on the Thai-built

workhorse.

Local engineers have focused on improving refinement and

driveability with a range of chassis changes, including the

introduction of electric power steering (with a faster steering rack

and fewer turns lock-to-lock), digressive front and rear shock

absorbers, a thicker front stabiliser bar and revised spring rates.

Among the measures to reduce noise, vibration and harshness

(NVH), Holden engineers have shifted the balance shaft on the

2.8L turbo-diesel engine, revised the engine and transmission

mounts, developed an ‘engine acoustic pack’ homing in on the

injectors, metal timing cover and oil pan, and, not least of all,

they’ve slotted in a new ‘central pendulum absorber’ (CPA)

automatic transmission torque converter.

Billed as a first for the one-tonne ute segment, CPA-type

torque converters are more commonly found on high-end diesel

passenger cars. According to Holden, the benefits include major

NVH benefits and improved driveability and fuel economy.

Manual versions of the Colorado also now have a new final drive

ratio, which is said to improve drive quality (particularly while

towing), while rounding out the engineering effort is a variety

of detail changes to reduce wind noise, a revised traction and

stability control system (including hill descent control) and new

tyres bringing improved low-rolling resistance, wet weather grip

and ride comfort.

Importantly, the Colorado – which is still available in single,

extended and dual cab body styles across LS, LT, LTZ and Z71

grades – also brings new levels of safety equipment, including a

rear-view camera as standard on all pick-up models (cab chassis

versions have it as an option) and, on selected models, advanced

systems such as forward collision alert, lane departure warning,

front and rear park assist and tyre pressure monitoring.

A driver’s knee airbag is also now on board, bringing the total

airbag count up to seven.

Styling changes are apparent both inside and out, cabin comfort

has gone up a notch and a host of new accessories have been

developed for the vehicle. However, the other key area in which

Colorado has lifted its game is with infotainment technology.

This comes courtesy of a new MyLink system delivered through

a colour touch screen and featuring DAB+ digital radio, Apple

CarPlay and Android Auto connectivity and embedded satellite

navigation and voice recognition.

Functionality and screen size (7” or 8”) varies according to the

model variant, but there is no doubt that – any way you look at it –

the Holden-based workhorse has taken a major step forward.

There is even now a remote window activation feature that

allows the owner to lower the windows from outside the vehicle

via the key fob.

One of the only areas in which Colorado hasn’t changed is

engine performance, with the 2.8l Duramax donk continuing

to develop 147kW of power and 500Nm of torque in the auto –

detuned to 440Nm in the manual.

It does, however, now meet the Euro 5 emissions standard

required of all new vehicles from November 1.

Holden

www.holden.com.au

Holden Colorado