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GWM Australia fixed chassis tuning that was "not good", and its updates are going global

GWM Australia fixed chassis tuning that was "not good", and its updates are going global

GWM has acknowledged its chassis tuning needed work in markets like Australia, and that updates made by the local team working to fix it – led by ex-Holden engineer Rob Trubiani – will be rolled out to global markets.

“When we shipped our vehicles to New Zealand and Australia, we got some complaints, especially to the suspension, to the chassis,” explained GWM chief technology officer Nicole Wu to Australian media.

“At the beginning our engineers didn’t agree. We think ‘no, suspension, our chassis is perfect, we haven’t gotten any complaints from customers, so why do Australian and New Zealand people complain?’ We didn’t understand.

“We have local managers and local teams and they told me that no, they’re not good, so we sent engineers to Australia to drive with the local people and to test with the local people, and we learned a lot.

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Rob Trubiani
Rob Trubiani

“We agree with your complaints, we need to optimise our chassis and our suspension, and that kind of complaint and modification are helping us to be stronger.”

Work to refine the ride and handling of GWM vehicles was given the name AT-1 (pronounced ‘at one’), announced in July 2025, with GWM taking up permanent residency at the former Holden proving ground in Lang Lang, Victoria.

Presently, GWM Australia has AT-1 chassis tunes on its Cannon Alpha ute and Haval H6 and Haval H6 GT mid-size SUVs, plus the plug-in hybrid version of the Tank 500 large SUV. The upcoming Ora 5 small electric SUV will also launch with an AT-1 tune.

GWM Australia fixed chassis tuning that was "not good", and its updates are going global插图1