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Mark _australia said...
any real 4WD will do it just fine with open centres.
What are these centre diffs of which you speak? None of that fancy-shmancy trickery on the 1982 Hilux. Same power to the front and back axle regardless. Just don't drive it in 4x on the blacktop, the tyres will work against each other and wear out quick smart, plus you'll struggle to shift out of 4x to 2x with all the torsion in the drive shaft (reverse a little can help).
In all seriousness though, I'm also in the market. I looked at this:
www.caradvice.com.au/249408/ute-comparison-ford-ranger-v-holden-colorado-v-isuzu-d-max-v-mazda-bt-50-v-mitsubishi-triton-v-nissan-navara-v-toyota-hilux-v-volkswagen-amarok/I've also read a similar review of 5 of those same utes in a print magazine at an airport in 2011, just after I bought a Navara. It came last out of the 5 at the time overall, though it did alright in some of the sub-categories. I didn't mind it, but did run out of clearance a couple of times and I gave it a knock on the underneath. Just cosmetic though, no real damage.
Not that I was put off, the only reason I sold it was to move to Canada. It was still pretty good.
In light of the reviews though, and the other two Hiluxes (one being the 1982 model) and one Navara I've owned over the years, I'm going for another Hilux now. I'm pretty tempted to go the wagon idea people have mentioned, but I think the convenience of putting long things inside and sleeping inside it would be outweighed by the inconvenience of being careful about wet gear and not being able to throw the occasional fridge or cupboard on the back without renting or buying a trailer. As a tradeoff I'm aiming for a canopy on the ute - the lockable hardcover I used to have didn't have enough room under it for a lot of stuff.