veblenesque
Active Member
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2020
- Threads
- 6
- Messages
- 25
- Reaction score
- 57
- Location
- Santa Fe NM
- Vehicle(s)
- 2022 Mojave manual, 2021 Sport S manual (sold)
- Thread starter
- #1
I drove a manual Sport S for 18 months and am now driving a Mojave. I like driving, which is why I'm a manual Gladiator owner. I thought people like me might want a head's up before ordering.
I bought the Mojave after deciding to move to lower gears. After pricing regearing and noticing that the Mojave already has 4.10s, I checked and high used prices and Gupton made the delta between my old Sport and a new Mojave only $12k with many add-ons including lane change warning and heated seats/steering wheel. The choice seemed easy.
I knew the Mojave would have a softer suspension with more travel, but I didn't realize how much difference this would make when driving. The car rides much better in that it is softer, but it isn't as sporty as the Sport. The biggest difference to me was the turn-in (how easily the car changes direction when you want to turn quickly). The Mojave takes a moment to roll and settle while the stiffer suspension on the Sport makes the car more engaging to drive. I frankly miss the Sport suspension on anything other than freeway or bumpy roads where the softer Mojave shines. For other manual Gladiator drivers who aren't going off-road, I'd recommend getting the Sport S and optioning up if you enjoy driving and aren't going off pavement and fire roads much.
A stiffer suspension also helps with towing, while the slightly lower gearing favors the Mojave. My sense is that the perfect towing Gladiator is a Maxtow Sport regeared to 4.56.
I can't wait to take the Mojave to Big Bend. The Sport was hopelessly stiff on high-speed offroad adventures. I'm sure the Mojave's going to be in its element there.
I bought the Mojave after deciding to move to lower gears. After pricing regearing and noticing that the Mojave already has 4.10s, I checked and high used prices and Gupton made the delta between my old Sport and a new Mojave only $12k with many add-ons including lane change warning and heated seats/steering wheel. The choice seemed easy.
I knew the Mojave would have a softer suspension with more travel, but I didn't realize how much difference this would make when driving. The car rides much better in that it is softer, but it isn't as sporty as the Sport. The biggest difference to me was the turn-in (how easily the car changes direction when you want to turn quickly). The Mojave takes a moment to roll and settle while the stiffer suspension on the Sport makes the car more engaging to drive. I frankly miss the Sport suspension on anything other than freeway or bumpy roads where the softer Mojave shines. For other manual Gladiator drivers who aren't going off-road, I'd recommend getting the Sport S and optioning up if you enjoy driving and aren't going off pavement and fire roads much.
A stiffer suspension also helps with towing, while the slightly lower gearing favors the Mojave. My sense is that the perfect towing Gladiator is a Maxtow Sport regeared to 4.56.
I can't wait to take the Mojave to Big Bend. The Sport was hopelessly stiff on high-speed offroad adventures. I'm sure the Mojave's going to be in its element there.
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