Sweetums
Well-Known Member
Yeah, the assumption is that the gears were modded - because why would a tech be "shocked" by OE gearing, and how would OE gearing (or any gearing) cause a fluid loss in the transmission? So either you're embellishing the story significantly, the shop is a bunch of clowns who are "shocked" by factory parts, or the vehicle was modified poorly by a previous owner (which still wouldn't explain fluid loss in the transmission).I’m not following you. Are you saying I destroyed a transmission and “modded” this to cover damage? Or are you accusing jeeps/the dealership?
I didn’t mod anything. Also doubt someone can ruin a “bulletproof” transmission in 10k miles….also, it’s very common. If you come out of your mom’s basement and look through your stupid ducks, you can read all the other comments and get some perspective.
"Dilly Willy" you sure are making a lot of assumptions! I came here and tagged jeep cares from dozens of other's recommendations who have had the same problem (there is a class action lawsuit). The stick poking worked, they reached out, offered extended warranty on new transmission and/or vehicle buy back for another truck.
So, to address your peabrain...yes I bought used. Didn't know that used jeeps were a bad thing. Never had issues with my USED Fords. Yes, it has both been driven as a CAR to work, and a TRUCK for home projects. I have not tried drag racing it yet, didn't know that was a thing with jeeps, only ever seen drag CARs.
"scared"? Um, ok.
Modded gears? where'd you get that? This vehicle was on lease until 40k miles. 2k miles were from the only actual owner. 10 by me. The 3-4 gear slipped when I got it, which is clearly "a jeep thing" (search it, assuming you degenerates in Australia have the capability). It led to a check engine light with an error code "gear ratio off" or something like that. Took it to dealership and they confirmed that as well as metal shavings in the system. Apparently according to you, driving a jeep causes that. How do you maintain a sealed, "bulletproof", "drag racer" transmission?! Shame on me I am a first time jeep owner, right! PA is a mandatory inspection state. It's been inspected, per state law, twice now. It's been in the shop 3x, as stated. So uh, again, why didn't jeep's technicians inspect it? How do state inspectors inspect a sealed transmission?
"Blew up"...definitely didn't blow up. Simply had the issues stated leading to Jeep replacing the transmission for factory defect. Here is one of many posts of THE EXACT SAME THING
We done here? We know you lost the crocodile man, but geez get over it and go be happy with your jeep drag racer.
Assuming the previous owner did things poorly was giving you the benefit of the doubt. Same with the death wobble, that's a sign of worn or poorly maintained steering parts, suspension part, or a cheap and poorly installed suspension kit.
Anecdotal evidence is just evidence of an anecdote. One reddit post and a handful of replies is hardly a sign of a significant pattern. The ZF8 is a tried and tested design that is one of the most widely used automatic transmissions in the world. There are going to be failures and manufacturing defects with any system, the question is what's the rate of failure; this is far more important than the number of failures. You can say there have been 100,000 transmission failures over the life of production, but if you've built 4 million units that still a failure rate of 0.025. There have been over 20 variants of this transmission built, including licensed ones by Stellantis and GM.Well, then that sounds even worse if Jeep sold me a "title washed" vehicle! THis was leased to 40k, 2k on the first owner, 10k on me. Carfax was clean when I bought from the dealer.
Is it common for Jeep dealers to do this?
Also, this is actually a very very very common problem.
Unless you have some numbers for rates of failure and failure mode, this sounds like someone ran the trans out of oil and didn't notice a seal leaking.
Sponsored