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JT vs JL ride quality

White Eagle

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My 2025 rides better than any luxury vehicle I’ve had bar none. It also handles the Texas Twisted Sisters as good as a Porsche. I’m really impressed how it holds curves.

I run 28lbs air Rancho RS7MT shocks
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RudeJeepin

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Jeep Gladiator JT vs JL ride quality 20220510_174628

21JLURD and 22JTRD. I picked up the Wrangler for myself. Made the mistake of letting the wife use ot for a few weeks while her car was in the shop. She wouldn't give it back, so I picked up the Gladiator.
Both Rubicons, both diesels, Wrangler had 7" screen and heated seats, Gladiator has 8.4" screen and no heated seats. Wrangler came with BFGs that I later swapped to Falken AT3W take offs. Gladiator came with Falken AT3W from the get. Same plastic front bumper, same front spring numbers. No other differences between the two. Both were completely stock for awhile. The Gladiator now has 35s, Clayton's diesel 0.5"/helper spring in front.
The Gladiator has always ridden better than the Wrangler. The extra wheelbase, lower center of gravity, extra weight all help to make it more planted and less body sway. Along with a smoother ride.

Sure you could cherry pick certain Wranglers against certain Gladiator and say the Wrangler rides better. But if you compare to like factory equipped rigs, the Gladiator is subjectively better.

Offroad capabilities, the argument could easily go the other way. But that is also subjective. Depending on use and how extreme you want to go. Pros and cons to both.
In the end, both are very capable and both ride OK. I've had rigs that ride better, and I've had rigs that ride worse. The JLU and JT are IMHO, the perfect compromise between capability and luxury.
 

BourbonRunner

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I had the opportunity 2-3 years ago to back to back test drive a brand new Rubicon and Mojave.

The Rubicon was distinctively stiffer with substantially more body roll, the Mojave was softer and cornered better. Similar amount of roll but it didn't feel like it would tip over in a turn the way the JTR did. The JTM's seat bolsters were better at keeping my rear end planted into turns, too.

The differences in suspension design are because the trucks have two distinctly different purposes. Can you get better in the aftermarket? Certainly. But as far as OEM is concerned the JTM is a far better riding vehicle than its siblings on the road - where most of these will live their lives. If you've ever driven the F150 Raptor, its a massive difference between it and an FX4 truck for similar reasons.
 

Sandman 4x4

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The difference between the JT and JL rear suspension makes the JL ride much better. Has anyone ever fixed the JT rear bob . As I see it the JT is just a bad design.
Rear Bob? My 2024 Sport S, with hardtop and no tow package has no bob. Matter of fact it’s not even level till I add a 500lbs load in the bed with my wife and I in the front seats. That’s like 3/4 of the payload rating. The ride and handling is the best of any live front axle I’ve ever been in. All while stock. When any of the stock shocks sprout a leak I will upgrade to what I usually use, Bilstein 5100’s. That really helped the last two Colorados I had.
 

Jrgunn5150

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Bought our Gladiator solely because it rode much nicer than a Wrangler.

Have no need for it's tiny bed or minimal tow capacity.
 

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NC_Overland

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JTs definitely ride better than JLs. I hated that rear bob too, but it was an easy fix. My stock overland shocks were awful and causing it. From brand new. I put on rubicon fox take off shocks and they improved it, but it wasn’t perfect. My Bilstein 5100s completely fixed it and improved the handling. It still rides better than the JLs I drive. It rides a little on the stiff side but better than my stock 2018 Z71 Colorado when you hit medium/large bumps.
 

BourbonRunner

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Bought our Gladiator solely because it rode much nicer than a Wrangler.

Have no need for it's tiny bed or minimal tow capacity.
If it only had a Hemi to correct that last problem...
 

RickF

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I had the opportunity 2-3 years ago to back to back test drive a brand new Rubicon and Mojave.

The Rubicon was distinctively stiffer with substantially more body roll, the Mojave was softer and cornered better. Similar amount of roll but it didn't feel like it would tip over in a turn the way the JTR did. The JTM's seat bolsters were better at keeping my rear end planted into turns, too.

The differences in suspension design are because the trucks have two distinctly different purposes. Can you get better in the aftermarket? Certainly. But as far as OEM is concerned the JTM is a far better riding vehicle than its siblings on the road - where most of these will live their lives. If you've ever driven the F150 Raptor, its a massive difference between it and an FX4 truck for similar reasons.
Interesting. I've opened both a Gladiator Rubicon and a Gladiator Mojave. In my experience, the Rubicon was soft and floaty and wandered around in the lane much more than the Mojave, which is stiffer, tracks straighter, and is generally more car-like.
 

BourbonRunner

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Interesting. I've opened both a Gladiator Rubicon and a Gladiator Mojave. In my experience, the Rubicon was soft and floaty and wandered around in the lane much more than the Mojave, which is stiffer, tracks straighter, and is generally more car-like.
Interesting because my experience with the JTR was substantially stiffer suspension rather than floating like the JTM. Definitely a lot more wander in the JTR. After the 1200 miles to fly and buy started wandering big time from the beginnings of Death Wobble but I immediately corrected with some Yeti and Falcon hardware and the Mopar LCA. Now it's far more compliant for daily driving.

But your car-like comment tracks here, too. It's nowhere near as car-like as her Bronco Sport and my BMW is a go-cart comparatively but as far as trucks I've owned go, I think it handles FAR better than my old Tacoma, even with a live axle up front.
 

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JTGuy

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It appears that ride is very subjective. I have done all that I am going to do to my JT suspension. I guess it rides better than I think.
 

ItsmeMrWright

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The longer wheelbase of the JT makes it a make better ride IMHO. If your concern with the rear then lift it higher then front lol and if its sway then HELLWIG and Steer-smart has solutions.
When I test drove my Nighthawk the first time I was amazed at the ride quality. I was fully expecting a "Jeepy" ride but it was smooth. And the road handling with the wide axles and General Tire Grabber AT's rivals any sports car.
 

DirkG

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Yep, as many others have said...

Ride Quality / High-speed Stability
Long wheelbase > short wheelbase

Maneuverability / Off-road Capability
Long wheelbase < short wheelbase
 

Janster

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It appears that ride is very subjective. I have done all that I am going to do to my JT suspension. I guess it rides better than I think.
Talk to your arse…...tell it to stop being moody. 😂
 

FLY-DOG

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My opinion is the OP is flat wrong if comparing a stock unmodified JLU and a stock unmodified JT.........My stock 2025 JT Mojave X rides much better than my stock 2026 JLU Rubicon. My JT Mojave X actually seems plush compared to my JLUR probably due to the specific Mojave suspension combined with a longer wheelbase.
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