Move over, Shark. BYD’s wildest creation yet has arrived… and its front end is wider than your average behind!
Okay so I’ve been a big fan of BYD for a while now.
And just when I thought the BYD Shark was already the most exciting thing to happen to Philippine motoring since… well, since forever… they went ahead and dropped this.
Meet the BYD Hammerhead.
The front end of this thing is… look, I don’t know how else to say it.
It’s wide.
The front facia of the Hammerhead spreads out way beyond the actual body of the truck — jutting out on both sides like, well, like the head of a hammerhead shark.
Hence the name.
It looks aggressive.
It looks like it wants to eat your Hilux for breakfast and your Ranger for dessert.
“The Hammerhead can go literally anywhere the Shark could go — and then some places the Shark wouldn’t even dare.”
So What Exactly IS the Hammerhead?
Think of it as the BYD Shark’s more unhinged cousin.
Based on the same Super DMO off-road platform that already makes the Shark a beast in the mud, the Hammerhead takes everything and dials it up.
Same BYD Blade Battery technology (29.6 kWh of lithium iron phosphate… which by the way, BYD developed themselves — they make there own batteries, a fact that still blows my mind). Same dual permanent magnet synchronous motors front and rear.
Same 435 horsepower combined.
Same earth-shaking 640 Newton-meters of torque.
But the Hammerhead adds wider front track for better stability off-road, beefier skid plates under that giant front end, and an upgraded wading depth — we’re talking beyond the Shark’s already impressive 700 millimeters.
So if you’re crossing that flood-prone areas or going through farm roads… the Hammerhead takes it in stride and just keeps moving.
Hammerhead Specs
| Specification | BYD Hammerhead (Imagined) | BYD Shark (Actual — for reference) |
| Overall Length | 5,457 mm | 5,457 mm |
| Front Width (the wide part) | Way, way wider | 1,971 mm |
| Body Width | 1,971 mm | 1,971 mm |
| Ground Clearance | 260 mm (upgraded) | 230 mm |
| Wading Depth | 800 mm | 700 mm |
| Combined Power | 435 ps | 435 ps |
| Combined Torque | 640 Nm | 640 Nm |
| 0-100 km/h | 5.7 seconds | 5.7 seconds |
| EV Range | 100 km (NEDC) | 100 km (NEDC) |
| Combined Range | 800 km | 800 km |
| Battery | BYD Blade Battery, 29.6 kWh | BYD Blade Battery, 29.6 kWh |
| Towing Capacity | 2,500 kg | 2,500 kg |
| V2L Output | 22V / 6kW | 22V / 6kW |
| Starting Price (PH) | ₱2,499,000 (imagined) | ₱2,298,000 (Premium) |
| Jaw Dropping Factor | Yes Yes Yes | Yes Yes |
It Can Go Anywhere. Literally.
The Shark was already doing things that other pickups couldn’t dream of — independent double wishbone suspension all around (yes, front AND rear), terrain modes, 360-degree camera, hill descent control.
But the Hammerhead?
With that wider front end, it has a lower center of gravity up front. It corners flatter. It tracks better on loose gravel. It gets itself into and out of rocky creek beds more confidently than anything I’ve ever driven before.
- All-wheel drive via dual permanent magnet synchronous motors (no transfer case needed — torque is controlled electrically, instantly)
- Independent double wishbone suspension front and rear — same as the Shark, same comfort on those DPWH “potholes” that you’ll find on all Philippine roads
- 700mm+ wading depth means you don’t panic when the road floods during heavy rains
- V2L (Vehicle-to-Load) power at the cargo bed — plug in your electric fan, kaldero, or Starlink during out-of-town camping in Samal
- DiPilot advanced driver assistance system — lane keeping, blind spot monitoring, the works
- 12.8-inch rotating infotainment screen, 360-degree camera, heads-up display (Premium trim)
- Only needs servicing once a year — that’s a 40% savings on PMS costs compared to your diesel truck
- Available in Deep Sea Blue, Aurora White, and Tidal Black (and the Hammerhead-exclusive Mako Grey that I just made up)
Pros and Cons
The Good Stuff
- Electric-first driving means near-zero fuel cost for daily commutes in Davao
- 800 km combined range means less “range anxiety” — you can go Davao to Cagayan de Oro and not sweat
- 435 horsepower is genuinely insane for a pickup at this price
- BYD Blade Battery is safer than conventional lithium batteries — it passes nail puncture tests
- Front design is so wide and distinctive, people will literally stop to look at your truck
- Annual PMS only — major savings over time vs diesel
- V2L means you can power your barangay during a blackout (slight exaggeration)
- BYD backed by the Ayala Group (ACMobility) — so dealer support in PH is solid
The Not-So-Good
- That front end is very wide — parallel parking will require emotional preparation
- No manual transfer case for purist off-roaders who like doing things old school
- EV charging infrastructure in Davao is still growing — not every barangay has a charger yet
- At ₱2.3M+ range, it’s not exactly pang-masa pricing (but cheaper than a Cybertruck by a mile)
- Getting spare parts in far-flung areas might still be a challenge
- The hammerhead front design may not fit in your standard parking slot in Gaisano Mall
The Hammerhead… it’s a ridiculous vehicle.
That front end looks like it swallowed another truck whole.
But you know what?
It also looks like it can go anywhere — flooded barangay roads, mountain trail, Samal beach access, muddy farm road in Buda — and come out the other side without a scratch and with the airconditioner still running perfectly.
That’s the point.
And in that sense, it is a profoundly Filipino vehicle for 2026.
It just doesn’t exist.
Happy April Fool’s Day!
DISCLAIMER — APRIL FOOLS!
The BYD Hammerhead is entirely fictional.
It does not exist.
BYD has not announced any such vehicle.
I made it up for April Fool’s Day, and I hope you had a good laugh (or at least a small smirk).
However — everything about the BYD Shark 6 DMO mentioned in this article (the specs, the technology, the pricing, the history of BYD) is real and based on official information from BYD’s website and other sources (Wikipedia, reddit, YouTube hehehehe.)
The Shark is very much a real vehicle you can actually buy in the Philippines right now.
The wide front end joke?
That part I made up.
The Shark’s actual front end is… normal-sized.
Mostly.
It’s still a big truck.
Visit your nearest BYD dealer

to see it for yourself.
Just don’t ask them about the Hammerhead.
For entertainment purposes only.
