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Toyota Tundra TRD Hammer Aims to Conquer Desert Rivals – Daily Car News (2026-03-19)
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Toyota Tundra TRD Hammer Aims to Conquer Desert Rivals – Daily Car News (2026-03-19)

T
Thomas Nismenth Automotive Journalist
March 19, 2026 7 min read

Daily Auto Brief: Toyota’s Desert Storm, MG’s Mystery Mover, and Australia’s Tough Week on Wheels

I woke up to the smell of damp eucalyptus and high-octane rumor. It’s one of those mornings where off-road trucks get louder, Britain hands over a bundle of thoughtful road tests, and Australia grapples with the messy side of motoring life. Coffee first. Then trucks.

Desert Wars: Toyota’s Amped-Up Tundra Lines Up Against Raptor and TRX

Two separate blips on the radar say roughly the same thing: Toyota’s turning up the wick on Tundra. One sighting at King of the Hammers (the desert playground where trucks prove bones and bravado), and another hint that a “TRD Hammer” flavor is gunning straight for Ford’s F-150 Raptor and Ram’s TRX. I’ve run Raptors across whoops that looked like a cardiogram and pointed a TRX at dunes big enough to hide a caravan—so the bar isn’t just high, it’s airborne.

Editorial automotive photography: Skoda Upcoming RAV4 Rival as the hero subject. Context: Skoda's ambition to compete with the next-generation Toyota

Let’s frame the fight with what we know today versus what Toyota’s likely cooking. If you’re shopping soon or just bench-racing in the group chat, here’s your cheat sheet:

Model Engine Power 0–60 mph Suspension Highlights Notes
Ram 1500 TRX 6.2L supercharged V8 702 hp ~4.5 sec Bilstein Black Hawk e2, long travel 35-inch rubber, Baja swagger out of the box
Ford F-150 Raptor R 5.2L supercharged V8 700 hp ~3.7 sec Fox Live Valve, optional 37s Desert missile; brutal and brilliant
Toyota Tundra (amped-up TRD) Twin-turbo V6 hybrid (expected) TBA TBA Likely long-travel, desert tuning Seen at King of the Hammers; Toyota’s reliability card is strong

Power wars aside, Toyota’s advantage may be durability and thermal management—my time in the i-Force Max hybrid showed a truck that calmly shrugged off heat and load where others felt busy. If the “Hammer” package keeps the cool under repeated hits and pairs it with real desert geometry (approach, departure, and breakover that won’t leave you beached), Ford and Ram suddenly have homework.

  • Who it suits: ski cabin haulers who also like bombing fire roads.
  • What I’ll watch for: shock tuning compliance on corrugations—Toyota’s recent TRD Pros ride better than the spec sheet suggests.
  • The gotcha: price creep. If Toyota swings for Raptor R money, it needs R-level spectacle.

When Porsches Leave the Pavement: The Cayenne That Prefers Dirt

Someone’s built a Cayenne that looks insulted by asphalt—more lift, more tire, more attitude. I’ve taken a stock Cayenne on rutted forestry trails and it’s already absurdly capable; add proper all-terrains, aggressive approach angles, and you’re basically in Rally Raid Lite. The charm here isn’t lap times—it’s the silly grin when you four-wheel-drift a luxury SUV past a campsite while the collie looks impressed.

Trick with these builds is keeping the damping from pogo-sticking on washboard. If the kit’s valving matches the tire sidewalls, it’ll cruise at 60 mph on gravel like a magic carpet. If not, bring dental insurance.

Autocar’s Trio: MG S9, Toyota C-HR+, and Ariel Nomad 2

MG S9: The Big Question Mark With Ambition

Autocar’s had a go in the MG S9, and while the badge has gone mass-market electric with surprising speed lately, this S9 sounds like a step up in polish. I haven’t driven it yet, but previous MGs I sampled—ZS EV and MG4—leapt forward generation-to-generation in ride comfort and cabin tech. If S9 aims at family EV crossovers (think Model Y and Ioniq 5 territory), it’ll need quiet rolling refinement and crisp infotainment to stand a chance. The old MG frustrations? Overeager stability control and infotainment lag. If those are cleaned up, we’ve got a contender.

Editorial automotive comparison shot: Toyota C-HR+ alongside MG S9. Context: Both vehicles are being compared in reviews today, showcasing their uniqu
  • What I’ll look for on test: wind noise at 110 km/h and one-pedal smoothness in stop-start traffic.
  • Daily-life fit: school runs, IKEA binges, and sneaky Sunday B-roads—if the chassis is awake.

Toyota C-HR+: Plug-In Calm for the School Run

The “+” here is the plug. I ran the latest C-HR PHEV on errands for a week last year and did most of it on electrons, only waking the engine for hills and highway merges. Expect around forty-ish miles of electric range in mild weather, which covers typical commutes and the after-work grocery boomerang.

  • Strengths: handsome cabin, whispery EV creep in car parks, and Toyota’s set-and-forget efficiency brain.
  • Quirks: the coupe-ish roofline still nibbles into rear headroom; the boot has an odd taper that bullies bulkier strollers.
  • Tip: keep it plugged nightly and you’ll visit petrol stations about as often as you visit your in-laws.

Ariel Nomad 2: The Most Legal Way to Laugh on Gravel

Autocar’s verdict matches my first dance with the original Nomad: it’s a rolling endorphin factory. The second-gen car tightens the engineering without sanitizing the stupid-fun bits. Think tougher structure, smarter ergonomics, and suspension that seems telepathic when you skim across corrugations. On rough Welsh lanes, the first Nomad felt like a rally car on a caffeine drip; the sequel just gives you more control to paint with the throttle.

  • Best moment: linking third-gear slides with one long exhale.
  • Real-world note: pack light; your backpack becomes the glovebox, boot, and pantry.

Australia’s Rough Patch: Theft Spikes, Pump Policy, and an EV Conversion Casualty

Victoria’s Car Theft Crisis

CarExpert flags a worrying rise in vehicle thefts across Victoria. I’ve chatted with a few owners north of Melbourne who’ve shifted to steering locks and camera doorbells—proper old-school meets new-school defense. The pattern often follows high values and easy key access; keyless systems are only as safe as your signal discipline. Pro tip I use on the road: sleep your fob in a small Faraday pouch and don’t leave OBD ports naked—cheap covers exist for a reason.

Editorial lifestyle/context image for automotive news: Theme: industry. Scene: A petrol station scene with people filling up their cars, while a polic

Fuel Thefts Surge; A Call to Change How We Pay

With petrol prices spiking, drive-offs are reportedly up, and a top cop is pushing for a structural fix at stations—essentially, pay-before-you-pump. I grew up bouncing between countries where that’s normal, and while it adds a half-minute to your day, it practically erases theft. The trade-off is customer flow at peak hours, but the math often favors security, especially for small operators who feel every unpaid litre.

Australian EV Conversion Firm Collapses, Points Finger at Ford

Another tough headline: a local EV conversion outfit has gone under, with blame aimed at Ford. Without wandering into the legal weeds, it highlights how fragile the retrofit ecosystem is—parts pipelines, software access, and certification rules can make or break a shop. I’ve driven some lovely conversions (a classic ute with instant torque is pure joy), but viability hangs on predictable supply and OEM cooperation. If those gates close, enthusiasts get stranded.

Sidebar Smiles: Honda Makes More Than Just Cars

CarExpert’s reminder made me grin. Honda’s always been the kid who brought a different instrument to band practice. Beyond Civics and CR-Vs there’s the HondaJet (genuinely sweet little bird), outboard motors, generators that hum through blackout weekends, and the odd robot that waves at your kids. It’s why Honda cabins often feel like they were designed by people who also build appliances you actually want to touch.

Quick Hits and Buyer Notes

  • If you’re truck shopping this year, watch Toyota’s off-road Tundra variant timeline before locking into a Raptor or TRX; competition tends to drag prices and sweeten packages.
  • PHEV life hack: if your commute is under 40 km, a C-HR+ driven and charged right feels EV-like 90% of the week.
  • MG S9 curiosity factor is high—test the infotainment responsiveness and lane-keep tuning on your demo route.
  • Considering a Cayenne off-road build? Budget for damping and proper skid plates before you splurge on light bars.

Conclusion

From desert trucks preparing for a dust-up to a featherweight mud-slinger called the Nomad 2, today’s sheet metal wants to play outdoors. Meanwhile, Australia’s motoring reality check—more thefts, tighter pumps, and a conversion casualty—reminds us the car world lives in the real world. Good week to keep your keys shielded, your tanks honest, and your plans open—Toyota’s about to make the truck market very interesting.

FAQ

  • Is Toyota really launching a Raptor/TRX rival?
    Multiple sightings and reports suggest an amped-up Tundra is coming. Specs aren’t confirmed yet, but the intent looks serious.
  • How far can the Toyota C-HR plug-in go on electricity?
    Expect roughly forty-ish miles (WLTP-style conditions). Real-world range varies with temperature, speed, and climate control use.
  • What makes the Ariel Nomad 2 different from the first one?
    It evolves the recipe with a stiffer, smarter chassis and improved ergonomics while keeping the hilarious off-road playfulness.
  • Are off-road Cayenne builds practical?
    For gravel, snow, and mild trails—absolutely, with the right tires and underbody protection. Rock crawling trophy trucks they are not.
  • What can I do to reduce car theft risk at home?
    Use a Faraday pouch for keyless fobs, add visible deterrents (steering lock, cameras), park nose-in behind another car if possible, and consider an OBD lock and a secondary tracker.
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WRITTEN BY
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Thomas Nismenth

Senior Automotive Journalist

Award-winning automotive journalist with 10+ years covering luxury vehicles, EVs, and performance cars. Thomas brings firsthand experience from test drives, factory visits, and industry events worldwide.

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