The "sport suspension" rides smooth. The stock 20s with stock tires also ride smooth. If you test drive a Nighthawk, you'll see. There is nothing different with the suspension that makes it less of an off-roader. It will perform just like a Sport with the same tires.Hey. No, I'm trying to buy a Gladiator in the next week or two and am trying to make sense of the Nighthawk vs Sport S vs Willy's beyond the stated specs. I don't want a "street" Jeep, and with the rims and "sport suspension"-- and the just so suspiciously low MSRP's had me wondering what the catch was. A Sport S with body-colored flares and top is now a solid $10k more than the Nighthawk. I just don't want to find out they like threw springs from a Cherokee or some other leftover parts bin special and then I come along, buy it for the body match color parts, throw some new wheels and tires on there, and have a really sh*tty offroader because of the other parts you can't see. But, for my area and needs, as with most people, a stock Sport trim Jeep will do more than I plan on. I'm hoping the same is true for the Nighthawk, but also don't want to feel every bump even more so than a regular Jeep (of which I've owned three, just no Gladiators yet).
I found the same thing before I pulled the trigger on mine. This trim package is unusually discounted. Those deep discounts are the only reason I was even looking at buying a new Jeep product after the COVID-era price hikes.Hey. No, I'm trying to buy a Gladiator in the next week or two and am trying to make sense of the Nighthawk vs Sport S vs Willy's beyond the stated specs. I don't want a "street" Jeep, and with the rims and "sport suspension"-- and the just so suspiciously low MSRP's had me wondering what the catch was. A Sport S with body-colored flares and top is now a solid $10k more than the Nighthawk.
Excellent vehicle for the MH, Please post a pic of the NIGHTHAWK graphic for your hood when you get it installed, we were also thinking about doing this to ours!Bought my Nighthawk a few weeks ago, love it so far, but I only have about 800 miles on it so far. I sold my 2006 Dodge Ram Laramie and got the Nighthawk. The dodge I bought new, 19 years ago I loved it, but it was too heavy to sensibly flat tow behind the MH. So far, I have spent more time working on the Nighthawk than driving it, enjoying it. I installed the base plates, wiring, and everything to flat tow it behind the MH, and put on a tonneau cover, seat covers, and I have the Nighthawk decal for the hood on the way.
It is supposed to be here next week, I spent 2 weeks figuring out how I wanted it made.Excellent vehicle for the MH, Please post a pic of the NIGHTHAWK graphic for your hood when you get it installed, we were also thinking about doing this to ours!
@AllMoparParts.comYou could ask the parts guy to look up the spring part numbers for nighthawk and sport.
I got a Rugged Liner drop-in. It's a pretty decent fit and It retains the 2x4 slots for hauling plywood. $280 through RealTruck.comI wanted to drive it for a few weeks to decide on any upgrades. I am leaning towards a bed liner (I toss my bike in the bed) and much needed better speakers.
Any suggestions?
Any info on the springs? Perhaps that's where the magic is.. maybe softer than usual?Nighthawk front shocks appear to be standard Sport ones used on vehicles as early as the 2018 Wrangler and later on the Gladiators. The Rears are specific for 2024 so this is unique.
- Benny
The springs are specific to 2024 but with that said Jeep released alot of new spring numbers for 24. The Nighthawk carries the Sport suspension code SDE, I have seen this used on earlier years wrangler and gladiators.Any info on the springs? Perhaps that's where the magic is.. maybe softer than usual?
Excellent vehicle for the MH, Please post a pic of the NIGHTHAWK graphic for your hood when you get it installed, we were also thinking about doing this to ours!