The first thing to know is that the cut-price, $120,000, Bighorn variant of the Ram 1500 has not made it to the other side of the transition to the facelifted Aussie range. Instead, the range now kicks off with the Laramie Sport which, at $141,950, before on-road costs is exactly the same price as the outgoing Hemi-powered version.
The only other grade in the current line-up is the flagship Limited which now carries a sticker of $159,950, which is $3000 up on the previous Limited. If you can wait until very late this year (according to Ram) there should be a Bighorn replacement available to bring the price of 1500 admission down considerably.
However, it’s worth remembering that the previous Bighorn model missed out on some important safety kit, so until we’ve seen the specifications, we’ll reserve judgment.
There’s no getting around the landed cost of these vehicles (thanks to the typically dreadful exchange rate plus the cost of converting them locally to right-hand drive) puts them at the premium end of the price scale. So, to fit with that, Ram has made a lot of gear standard on Australian examples - gear that is not standard in the US, for instance.
That includes things like the panoramic twin-sunroof, the Night Edition graphics on the Limited, but across the board, these are highly specified vehicles.
For instance, the entry-level Laramie Sport (which uses the standard output version of the new engine) gets all the driving modes and all-wheel-drive functionality, LED lighting, the 14.2 inch, portrait-oriented central screen, Harman Kardon stereo, 20-inch alloy wheels, dual wireless phone charging, wireless connectivity, powered tailgate, reversing camera and parking sensors.
Leather trim is standard and so is the overall interior look that suggests high-end finishes and fittings. Heated and ventilated seats in all five positions are also standard.
Move up to the Limited and things get even swisher. The front seats now have a five-way massage function, there’s extra safety in the form of traffic sign recognition, the headlights feature an animation function, there’s proximity lighting, a switchable digital rear-view mirror, surround cameras and 22-inch alloy wheels. Crucially, there are also mechanical upgrades including the high-output version of the Hurricane engine and air suspension. The fuel tank also grows from the Laramie’s 98-litre unit to a full 125 litres.
What’s missing? At this price-point, an electrically adjustable steering column and a head-up display for the driver, not to mention a network of smart towing cameras and electronic towing-assistance programs that at least one of the Ram 1500’s major competitors boasts as standard.