Photo: Holden
The Holden One Tonner Is The King Of Work Trucks In The Outback
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These car and truck hybrids come in all shapes and sizes, but one of the coolest has to be the late Holden One Tonner, which was the chassis cab cousin of the legendary Holden Ute. Who knew that the best work truck in the world was actually a car? See, the things that make trucks cool are their utility and practicality, and in our modern automotive landscape full of giant trucks, coupe-utes are, indeed, more practical than most trucks. Too bad we can’t buy them in the U.S., unless you want to argue that the Ford Maverick and Hyundai Santa Cruz are coupe-utes in some way. But these are still far from the Holden Ute and Holden One Tonner, sadly. I don’t know what it is about a chassis cab that is objectively cool. It could be its unabashed utility, which doesn’t try to hide behind a sleek bed. And a chassis cab ’ute based on the Holden Commodore is ironically one of the best designs ever. Ironic, because the One Tonner makes zero pretense to style, save for the first-generation model, which looks great without even trying. I’d easily take a One Tonner over its famous counterparts in the U.S., the Ford Ranchero and Chevy El Camino. The Holden One Tonner was available either with an inline-six or a V8 throughout its production run. Displacement ranged from 2.8 liters on the inline-sixes all the way to 6.0 liters on the V8s. The One Tonner was around from the early ’70s through early ’80s. Then it came back for a brief production run in the mid-aughts, always based on the Holden Commodore as a platform. One of the criticisms I often hear of the Ford Maverick is that it’s a car-based (unibody) vehicle, but so what? Just because something is akin to a car, doesn’t mean it can’t do a good impression of a tough truck, like the One Tonner.
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