Spending a full day in the Hino 700 Series was a reminder that a truck is never just a truck. The badge might be the same, and both vehicles shared the same broad 700 Series DNA, but the two models I drove had very different roles, engine characteristics, handling traits and body applications.
The first was the Hino 700 Series FS 2845 AMT Air tipper, fitted with a Chris’s Body Builders 4.5-metre Hardox tipper body. The second was the Hino 700 Series FY 3036 AMT Air tilt tray, fitted with an STG 9200mm tilt slide tray.
On paper, they both sit in Hino’s heavy-duty 700 Series range. On the road, they felt like two different tools built for two different jobs.
Hino 700 Series FS 2845 AMT Air tipper
The FS 2845 was the truck I spent most of the day driving, and it felt well suited to the kind of work many councils, civil contractors and construction fleets would recognise: urban traffic, suburban arterials, freeways, hills, rain and stop-start movement.
This model was powered by Hino’s E13C-BL 13-litre engine producing 450hp and 2,157Nm of torque. It was matched to the Hino M112 12-speed automated manual transmission, with a 6×4 axle layout, 28,000kg manufacturer GVM and 50,000kg GCM.
The body was a 4.5-metre Hardox tipper from Chris’s Body Builders, with 1150mm high sides, 5mm Hardox tailgate, sides and front walls, and a 6mm Hardox floor. It was also fitted with a 50mm 35-tonne rated Rockinger RO500B coupling.
That combination gave the truck a clear sense of purpose. The 13-litre engine had plenty in reserve, particularly when climbing or joining faster traffic. The 12-speed AMT also became more impressive the more time I spent with it. Like many heavy vehicles, it rewards the driver who learns how the gearbox wants to be treated. Once I started being smoother and more deliberate with throttle inputs, the truck felt more settled and predictable.
The drive route included Sydney traffic, the M5, M7, Richmond and the Bells Line of Road through the Blue Mountains. That variety showed the tipper’s strength. It was easy enough to manage in traffic, but still had the muscle and engine braking support needed when the road opened up or started climbing.
Hino 700 Series FY 3036 AMT Air tilt tray
The second truck was the FY 3036 AMT Air tilt tray, and it immediately felt different.
This model used Hino’s A09C 9-litre engine producing 360hp and 1,569Nm, again matched to the 12-speed Hino M112 AMT. It had an 8×4 axle layout, 30,000kg GVM, 42,500kg GCM and a longer 6738mm wheelbase.
The body was an STG 9200mm tilt slide tray with a 6mm Hardox chequer plate floor and a 13.6-tonne single-line pull winch. It was configured for rigid metro and regional operation, making it the sort of vehicle suited to equipment transport, recovery-style work and specialist fleet applications where payload length and body capability matter as much as engine output.
Compared with the tipper, the tilt tray had a different driving character. The smaller 9-litre engine did not have the same effortless shove as the 13-litre tipper, but the truck still felt capable and refined. The twin-steer layout and longer body changed the way it moved through corners and traffic, and it required a slightly different mindset from the driver.
That was one of the key lessons from driving the two trucks back-to-back. Even within the same range, different bodies and configurations create different personalities.
Safety systems that matter in real fleet use
Both trucks were fitted with Hino SmartSafe features as standard, including Driver Monitor, EBS braking, Vehicle Stability Control, ABS, Pre-Collision System with Autonomous Emergency Braking and Pedestrian Detection, Lane Departure Warning System and Safety Eye distance warning.
On narrow roads and in wet conditions, those systems were useful rather than theoretical. The lane warning system could be noticeable, but it also acted as a valuable reminder when concentrating on mirrors, road position, traffic and changing conditions. The distance warning system was also helpful in keeping attention on the gap to vehicles ahead.
For fleets, this is where the 700 Series makes sense beyond the spec sheet. These trucks may be driven by professional drivers, but in local government, construction, infrastructure and support operations, heavy vehicles are often driven by people for whom driving is only part of the job. Predictability, visibility, comfort and safety support all become important.
Comfort and technology
Both trucks featured an air-suspended cab, next-generation ISRI NTS2 driver seat, steering wheel controls, a 7-inch TFT driver instrument panel and a 10.1-inch smart multimedia unit with Wi-Fi connectivity.
The cabin was quiet and comfortable over a long day, and wireless Apple CarPlay made it easy to stay connected and listen to podcasts between stops. There were small differences in cabin storage between the two vehicles, including cup holder arrangements, which is a reminder for fleet buyers to pay attention to cab configuration details when specifying trucks with dealers.
These details matter because they affect the working day. A driver might forgive a missing convenience feature on a short test drive, but after months in service, storage, seating, visibility and connectivity all contribute to fatigue, acceptance and productivity.
Learning the truck, not just driving it
The biggest takeaway from the drive was how much the 700 Series rewards familiarity.
Modern heavy vehicles are much easier to drive than older trucks, and the 12-speed AMT removes much of the physical workload. But they are not passenger cars. Each truck still has its own personality, and the driver still plays a major role in fuel use, brake wear, smoothness and safety.
That was especially obvious when using cruise control. In a car, adaptive cruise can feel almost semi-autonomous. In a truck, it needs to be used more selectively. The driver still needs to read the road ahead, anticipate traffic, manage hills and avoid unnecessary braking or acceleration. In heavy vehicles, poor anticipation has a much bigger impact on fuel consumption and wear.
Which one suits which fleet?
The FS 2845 tipper is the more muscular, construction-ready option. With the 13-litre engine, 6×4 layout, 50,000kg GCM and Hardox tipper body, it suits councils, contractors and civil fleets needing a robust heavy-duty tipper with strong performance and towing capability.
The FY 3036 tilt tray is a more specialised platform. Its 8×4 layout, long wheelbase, 9200mm tray and 13.6-tonne winch make it better suited to metro and regional transport tasks where body length, stability and equipment handling are central to the job.
Both showed why model selection in heavy vehicles needs to be driven by application, not just badge, price or power output. The right truck is the one that matches the body, route, payload, driver profile and operational risk.
After driving both, the Hino 700 Series left the impression of a heavy-duty range that is becoming easier to operate without losing the distinct character that makes trucks so application-specific. For fleet buyers, that is the key point: the 700 Series is not one truck. It is a platform that needs to be specified carefully for the job it will do every day.
- Two Hino 700 Series trucks, two very different personalities
Spending a full day in the Hino 700 Series was a reminder that a truck is never just a truck. The badge might be the same, and both vehicles shared the same broad 700 Series DNA, but the two models I drove had very different roles, engine characteristics, handling traits and body applications. The first - Hino Expands 300 Series with New Euro 6 Diesel Line-Up
Hino Australia has expanded its 300 Series light-duty truck range, with Euro 6-compliant diesel models now joining the existing Hybrid Electric line-up. The update broadens customer choice across the light-duty segment, while introducing new safety, comfort and drivability features designed to support businesses operating in urban delivery, trade and regional freight applications. Daniel Petrovski, Manager - Hino Expands Regional Presence with New Dealership
Hino Australia has expanded its regional footprint with the opening of a new dealership in Shepparton in Victoria’s Goulburn Valley. The facility has been developed by the award-winning Jacob Group, which has operated Jacob Hino in Wodonga for 25 years, and represents a significant investment in the region’s growing transport and agricultural sectors. “The award-winning - Suppliers’ outlook for 2026: why fleets are preparing for a more deliberate year
As fleet operators plan for 2026, suppliers across trucks, bodies and zero-emission technology are describing a market that is stabilising after several extraordinary years. Interviews with manufacturers and solution providers point to a more measured investment environment, where replacement cycles, whole-of-life cost and operational resilience are taking priority over rapid expansion. From disruption to a - Why fleet truck delivery timelines are stretching — and where the real delays occur
For Fleet Managers and Procurement Managers, securing a new truck today is no longer just about when a chassis rolls off the production line. Delivery timelines are increasingly shaped by what happens after the chassis is built — particularly the time it takes to complete body builds and final fit-out. At a media briefing late in 2025, Richard










