JAC has joined fellow Chinese auto brand GWM in enlisting a former Holden chassis engineer to fine-tune its models to better suit Australian conditions.

While many automakers localise their vehicles to some extent – including Chinese brands such as BYD and Chery with its upcoming plug-in hybrid diesel ute – Ford is the only automaker still capable of designing and engineering a model from scratch in Australia, where the Ranger and Everest’s T6 platform was developed for global markets.

Earlier this year GWM employed former Holden dynamics guru Rob Trubiani to lead a local chassis tuning program based at the Lang Lang proving ground previously owned by General Motors, starting with its answer to the top-selling Toyota RAV4 – the Haval H6 – and followed by other models including the Cannon Alpha dual-cab.

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Now JAC has followed suit, announcing it has engaged international engineering firm Multimatic and its technical director for vehicle dynamics, former Holden chassis engineer Michael Barber, to develop a localised ride and handling package for its upcoming Hunter ute, also at Lang Lang.

When it goes on sale in mid-2026, the JAC Hunter will be a direct rival for plug-in hybrid utes including the top-selling BYD Shark 6 and other existing PHEV utes in the GWM Cannon Alpha PHEV, and Ford Ranger PHEV.

Mr Barber has been with Multimatic since June 2015, but he started his career as a chassis design engineer for Holden in 1998, before becoming a vehicle dynamics development engineer in 1999. He served in that role for eight years and was responsible for the ride and handling of VU, VX, VY and VE Commodores.