Like the Hombre, the i-Series shares its platform with the General Motors mid-size pickups. It is built at the same plant in Shreveport, Louisiana which produces the Chevrolet Colorado and GMC Canyon, which were in turn developed off the cab and chassis of the Thai-built Isuzu D-Max by GM, Isuzu, and GM do Brasil. The sales for the i-Series were poor, with just 1,377 sold from the start of production through February 2006 according to Automotive News.
As part of Isuzu’s withdrawal from the United States market after the 2009 model year, the i-Series was discontinued, replaced by the related Hummer H3T for GM’s Hummer brand.
The Ascender is the same thing as a Chevrolet Trailblazer, and the Isuzu i-series pickup trucks are identical to Chevy Colorados. All Isuzu does is take vehicles from GM and slap a couple of funky badges on them.
The problem is that Isuzu doesn't build any vehicles at all.
You may think that's preposterous because there are still Isuzu stores across America -- indeed, I drove a 2007 Isuzu Ascender this past week -- but in reality, Isuzu dealerships are nothing but a farce. They just sell General Motors vehicles with goofy names.
New Isuzus, though, are nothing but plagiarism on wheels, and that's a remarkably stupid idea coming from what was once such a big, powerful, international company. It's hard to believe that someone, somewhere, thought they could buy a few mediocre but well-known Trailblazers, give them a totally unknown new name, and have the public clamoring to buy one with the Isuzu badge. That makes no sense.


In fact, driving that Ascender felt like driving mechanical death because it's so obvious that Isuzu is about to croak. There's no point in hiding it. The company has left life support and is quickly being wheeled to the morgue, where it will unceremoniously be pronounced dead and quickly buried beside Oldsmobile in the Scrap Metal Cemetery.


So, if you want to buy a Trailblazer and save some cash, check out the Ascender. You could probably get a great deal on one.
