© 2024 The Illawarra Flame
11 min read
Driven: 2024 Nissan Navara PRO-4X Warrior

Nissan Australia and Aussie vehicle-engineering company, Premcar, have combined forces to produce a hard-core Navara ute via their ongoing Warrior collaboration.

It looks the goods and packs a punch, conversion wise, on paper at least.

But is this upgraded and re-engineered 4WD all it’s cracked up to be?

How much does the 2024 Nissan Navara PRO-4X Warrior cost?

The Nissan Navara Pro-4X Warrior, based on the SL Navara, is only available as a dual-cab with either a six-speed manual gear-box ($68,265 excluding on-road costs) or a seven-speed automatic transmission ($70,765 excluding on-road costs). 

For reference, the Pro-4X automatic is $61,405 (excluding on-road costs) and Pro-4X manual is $58,905 (excluding on-road costs).

What features do you get in the 2024 Nissan Navara PRO-4X Warrior?

Standard features on our test vehicle – a Pro-4X Warrior with a seven-speed auto – include 8.0-inch multimedia touch-screen with wired Apple CarPlay and Android Auto as well as satnav, dual-zone climate control, AEB, lane-keeping assist, around-view monitor, and a rear diff-lock. 

As part of the Premcar engineering upgrade more than $9000 worth of extras in the Warrior (over the standard Pro-4X) include a winch-compatible bull bar with integrated light bar, a Warrior-specific tow bar, a larger 3mm steel bash-plate, Cooper Discoverer All Terrain AT3 275/70R17 tyres (and a full-sized alloy spare), a 100kg GVM upgrade (now 3250kg), 260mm ground clearance (up 40mm, with springs and tyres making up 15mm and 25mm respectively), 30mm-wider tracks (to 1600mm), revised suspension with new spring rates and dampers (aimed at improving ride and handling), and a larger and taller jounce bumper for less impact harshness at full suspension travel.

Standard paint is black star; premium paint choices are white diamond and stealth grey (on our test vehicle) at a cost of $650. As always, check with your dealer on up-to-date pricing.

The Pro-4X Warrior also has a Nissan Genuine towbar as standard.

But, beyond the engineering upgrades, what’s also interesting about the Pro-4X Warrior is what has had to happen behind the scenes, under Premcar’s direction, to get the vehicle to this stage.

Australia has some of the harshest driving conditions and road/track surfaces in the world: chopped-up bitumen back roads, soft spirit-sapping beach and desert sand, through to spine-rattling corrugations. And those surfaces and conditions put immense stress and strain on vehicles, drive trains and components.

Premcar designs, manufactures and validates its vehicle work here in Australia in the harshest of conditions those 4WDs may face day in, day out for the term of their vehicular ‘life’. It’s not testing, it’s punishment.

Australia’s aftermarket sector is great – thriving and always innovating – but unfortunately, as in any industry, there are ‘cowboys’ out there and some of the modifications done to vehicles may be, shall we say, less than ideal and even illegal or non-compliant in terms of engineering approval. The work done to your 4WD may even void your vehicle’s warranty.

But, with Premcar’s Nissan collab, any engineering work or accessory fitment on the Pro-4X Warrior is all covered by a Premcar warranty that matches Nissan’s five-year/unlimited km warranty.

This is the toughest Navara on the mainstream market.

The Warrior is 1895mm high, 1920mm wide, 5350mm long (with a 3150mm-long wheelbase) and has a listed kerb weight of 2298kg.

It is taller than a standard Navara, with 40mm more ground clearance than its Pro-4X stablemate and the wheel track has been extended by 30mm (from 1570mm to 1600mm) giving it an aggressive posture.

The bullbar, eye-catching red steel bash plates, wheel arch flares, chunky Cooper Discoverer All Terrain AT3s and black stainless-steel double tube sports bar with sail panel all add to that tough appearance.

Inside the cabin, the new updated dash – with an easy-to-use 8.0-inch multimedia screen, which has wired Apple CarPlay and Android Auto – is the focal point.

The cabin is a well designed space, a nice combination of nice materials and good build quality and nice materials. But even with leather accents, ‘Warrior’ branding and other nice touches, the cabin feels a bit old and a little smaller and squeezed for space inside than some rivals.

The driver seat is eight-way power-adjustable, but the front passenger seat is four-way manually adjustable – and that’s disappointing in a circa-$71,000 vehicle.

There are plenty of storage spaces, cupholders, bottle holders, and receptacles in which to place your everyday carry gear.

There’s a USB-A charge point in the console tray, and a USB-A and a USB-C in the centre console, as well as a 12V outlet in the console tray and one in the centre console.

The seats are quite comfortable but the rear seat, while comfortable enough, is really the realm of two adults only or three children. It’d be a squeeze for three adults.

There is a fold-down arm-rest with cupholders, as well as bottle holders in the doors, map pockets on the seat-backs, directional air vents but only one USB-A charging point on the back of the centre console – get ready for the teenage arguments over that!

The Navara line-up had the maximum five-star ANCAP safety rating from testing in 2015, but that rating has now expired. 

Safety gear includes seven airbags (dual front, front-side, curtain and driver’s knee SRS items), AEB, forward collision warning, lane departure warning, intelligent lane intervention, blind spot warning, a surround-view monitor (with moving object detection), rear cross traffic alert, and more.

The rear seat has three child-seat anchorage points and one ISOFIX point each on the left and right seats.

Off-road driver-assist tech includes off-road monitor, tyre pressure monitoring system, hill start assist, trailer sway control, hill descent control and an electronic locking rear differential.

This top-spec variant is missing adaptive cruise control and is not quite as comprehensively equipped with driver-assist tech as some of its rivals. 

The Navara range is covered by a five-year/unlimited kilometre warranty, and capped price servicing. That’s adequate in terms of years, not the best, but the unlimited kms factor is in its favour.

Service intervals are set for 12 months or 20,000km. Capped price servicing is available for up to six years, with prices ranging from $572 for the first service through to $911 for the sixth service.

What is the 2024 Nissan Navara PRO-4X Warrior like to drive?

The Pro-4X has the Navara line-up’s 2.3-litre four-cylinder twin-turbo-diesel engine, which produces 140kW@3750rpm and 450Nm@1500-2500rpm. Those aren’t class-leading power and torque figures but that’s okay because that engine and auto work well together, yielding a quietly effective partnership rather than an exciting one.

This ute has a part-time four-wheel drive system with high- and low-range 4WD, and a rear diff lock.

For a vehicle that has been engineered as a hard-core 4WD, the Warrior is surprisingly decent on road. 

Steering is nicely balanced, there’s plenty of visibility, the 2.3-litre engine offers lots of torque across a wide rev range and the coil-spring suspension set-up and upgraded (Premcar-tuned) dampers, all aimed at yielding a better ride off-road, does well on sealed surfaces. 

But even with all of these changes though, it's still a Navara under the metal so it's not the most dynamic vehicle to drive on a sealed road, but I don't mind it. 

For a 4WD with such an in-your-face appearance, it is nice to drive and it's also quiet inside, exhibiting noticeably better refinement than you might expect in something designed for the dirt and riding on all-terrain tyres. I’s not as refined as some of its rivals, such as the Ranger or Amarok, but it does a good job. 

Premcar’s work has focussed on the wheels and tyres and the suspension – new springs and shocks, adding a 40mm total suspension lift – is Warrior-specific and aimed at yielding a more controlled and more comfortable ride. The benefit of that package is only clearly obvious when you hit dirt tracks or gravel roads that are minefields of deep ruts and severe muddy potholes. 

The Warrior’s suspension package takes the sting out of most harsher lumps and bumps. It’s not in the realm of something like a Ford Ranger Raptor, but it does okay.

When you're on the dirt, the Warrior has a nice, settled feel to it. In fact, it rides as smoothly as possible for a ute through ordinary terrain.

The Warrior is wider and taller, so as well as having more ground clearance and better, more off-road-friendly angles – approach (36 degrees), departure (19 degrees), and ramp-over (26.2 degrees) – it sits well on tracks, giving a little bit more control through trickier routes. 

Steering retains a nice lightness so, for a reasonably big ute, it gets around quite nicely. The turning circle is 12.5m, but this Navara never feels too cumbersome to steer around on bush tracks. 

Low-range gearing is good (2.717:1) and there's plenty of torque across a nice spread of revs, so you can tap into that whenever you need to when you're low-range, four-wheel driving.

It does have a rear diff lock, a crucial part of any 4WD’s track-tackling toolkit, as well as driver-assist tech such as hill descent control, which is adequately effective. 

Beyond any of its other mechanical or driver-assist tech attributes, what really sets the Warrior apart is its pure physicality that makes it suited to four-wheel driving: raised suspension, better ground clearance (260mm), and a wider wheel track, among other things, give it a stability, give it the ability to get up and over hard-core rocks steps and anything else you could likely point it at.

It has a listed wading depth of 600mm and I did have to cross two swollen creeks on this trip, while out and about taking photos of this ute, and it handled those moist challenges with ease.

Showroom-standard 4WDs often leave the car yard with road-friendly rubber, to give customers a comfortable and reasonably quiet ride, but those are far from ideal if you’re planning to use your vehicle as an off-road tourer.

The Warrior rides on Cooper Discoverer AT3s, which are very decent all-terrain tyres that offer plenty of bite in the dirt, aren’t too noisy on the bitumen and don't seem to affect ride and handling in any pronounced negative way. 

Niggles? The steering is not reach-adjustable, which means you’re unable to precisely dial-in your driving position; and the 2.3-litre engine becomes a bit noisy when pushed hard.

In terms of packability for touring, it’s okay.

The tub is a decent enough load space, measuring 1509mm long, 1560mm wide, 1134mm (between the wheel arches), and 519mm deep (from the tub’s top edge to its floor)

It has a durable tub-liner, the Utili-track load-restraint system (basically a rail mounted to each tub side wall with two moveable tie-down points in each rail), plus four fixed tie-down points lower on the tub’s inside wall. 

Our test vehicle had the soft fold-away segmented tonneau cover, which is a bit of a pain to clip into place when you need to close it but it does afford decent protection from the weather, even in heavy rain storms which we had to drive through on several occasions during our trip.

Payload is listed as 952kg. This Navara has a 100kg gross vehicle mass (GVM) upgrade to 3250kg and a GCM (gross combined mass) of 5910kg.

Towing capacity is 750kg (unbraked) and 3500kg (braked). 

Fuel consumption is listed as 8.1L/100km on a combined cycle. 

Fuel consumption on this test was 9.9L/100km, but I did do a lot of high- and low-range 4WDing during this test’s hours-long off-road section.

The Warrior has an 80-litre fuel tank, so, going by those fuel-consumption figures, I’d expect an effective touring range of about 778km, but remember that figure includes a built-in 30km safe-distance buffer.

That's a fair travelling distance for a contemporary dual-cab ute, but keep in mind that your fuel-consumption will be higher than that because you'll be carrying a lot more gear than we had onboard during our test, which included vehicle-recovery equipment, a portable air compressor, tool bag, puncture-repair kit, tyre deflator, food and water.

Is the 2024 Nissan Navara PRO-4X Warrior any good?

There’s plenty to like about the Nissan Navara Pro-4X Warrior.

This is a purpose-built off-road vehicle and it’s ready for action as is. It drives nicely on-road – making long road-trip days on bitumen less of a chore – and is impressively capable off-road.

Premcar has completed top-quality conversion work on this ute with design, development and testing undertaken in Australia and a comprehensive warranty covers all of that work, as well as the fitment of accessories.