> Sure, it was posted to this group over a month ago. No diesel is
> planned. They're just offering us a rebadged Chevy Colorado (yeah,
> we're all underwhelmed).
While Isuzu won't(or legally, can"t) admit it or get credit for it, this
vehicle was designed by Isuzu for GM to sell in the US and Asia. I believe
it has already been sold under the Isuzu badge in Asian countries. This is
the same situation as the DuraMax diesel engine, which was designed by Isuzu
and built jointly with GM in Ohio. Guess who got the credit for one of the
best and most popular engines ever built?
The downside of the i-280 and i-350 trucks is they will be built in
Louisiana where the Hombre/S-10 was built but I spoke with an Isuzu tech rep
the other day and he has not heard of any problems with the vehicle under
the GM badge and besides, Isuzu will have a 7/75,000 Powertrain warranty.
Joe D
>> Sure, it was posted to this group over a month ago. No diesel is
>> planned. They're just offering us a rebadged Chevy Colorado (yeah,
>> we're all underwhelmed).
>
> Hmmmmm......underwhelmed indeed. We've got quite enough half-assed car
> makers already. Wonder why they even bothered.....
Andrew - 28 May 2005 14:11 GMT
> While Isuzu won't(or legally, can"t) admit it or get credit for it, this
> vehicle was designed by Isuzu for GM to sell in the US and Asia. I believe
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
> the other day and he has not heard of any problems with the vehicle under
> the GM badge and besides, Isuzu will have a 7/75,000 Powertrain warranty.
If they offered diesels, I would buy one. It's really that simple. If
they aren't offering diesels -- regardless of warranty -- I'm not
interested.
Joe D - 29 May 2005 05:34 GMT
You won't get an argument from me on that. I'm interested to see the Isuzu
version and am considering buying one as I do contract work for an Isuzu
dealer and can surely get a good deal. If there was a diesel option there
would be no considering...it's a done deal!
Joe D
>> While Isuzu won't(or legally, can"t) admit it or get credit for it, this
>> vehicle was designed by Isuzu for GM to sell in the US and Asia. I
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
> they aren't offering diesels -- regardless of warranty -- I'm not
> interested.
Andrew - 30 May 2005 13:12 GMT
> You won't get an argument from me on that. I'm interested to see the
> Isuzu version and am considering buying one as I do contract work for an
> Isuzu dealer and can surely get a good deal. If there was a diesel
> option there would be no considering...it's a done deal!
Well, it's a risk, but I can understand why you would buy an Isuzu
pickup gasser if you could buy it for a fire-sale price. The old series
of U.S. Isuzu pickups were poor in the extreme. Lately, I've seen S10
Chevy trucks carrying the Isuzu brand name. This would lead me to
believe that Isuzu is still not real big on quality. I have a recent S10 -
best engine I've ever had - but everything else on the truck breaks down.
Real junk.
I'm to the point where I am tired of inefficient gas engines. I need a
pickup for work and farm. I'm going to have a small, efficient diesel
engine (3 or 4 liter turbo) even if it means I have to install one in my
old Toyota truck.
I'd much rather have a new one - but U.S.idiot automakers apparently don't
see it my way. They've been content to screw the public for some time.
Some people are high on the Toy hybrids but I don't think the public
realizes the costs involved with those battery packs. Some friends have
an '04 Prius and the computer has gone out twice so far - less than 35,000
miles. These repairs are going to really expensive when the warranty is
over......
JR - 31 May 2005 00:37 GMT
Andrew decreed:
> The old series of U.S. Isuzu pickups were poor in the extreme.
Surely you're not referring to the original P'up! My '83 would be
insulted!
Jack
---
http://www.isuzupup.com
Zach - 07 Jun 2005 03:14 GMT
If you want an Isuzu diesel pickup in the US you could always buy the
shortest wheelbase version of the Isuzu NPR cabover chassis cab and
have a pickup bed fitted to it. I believe it would have to be a custom
bed as the shortest box the SWB version of the NPR is rated to take is
10 feet.
alfredB18@prodigy.net - 15 Jun 2005 10:33 GMT
Actually, make mine an NQR crew cab. If push comes to shove, the NPR
CC HD version will suffice.
Too bad they aren't for Hombre-like prices.