ChrisNLA
Well-Known Member
I listed the properly equipped twice - I guess it's being ignored.
4.10 ratio, 33" tires, auto transmission, Rubicon or Rubicon X, 3.6 or 2.0
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I listed the properly equipped twice - I guess it's being ignored.
4.10 ratio, 33" tires, auto transmission, Rubicon or Rubicon X, 3.6 or 2.0
I thought Jeep adding the full float rear axle option is what enabled the 5K lb. towing bump from 3500lbs....Nope - the 2026 Rubicon X with the 3.6 with the correct axle ratio is rated at 5,000 pounds.
4.10 gears, 33" tires (standard on the X) and a 3.6 tows 5,000 pounds. The hemi, stuck at 3,500 pounds.
You burn more fuel, thus generate more BTUs and heat rejection becomes an issue UNDER LOAD.
It's logic and engine engineering.
Rubicon X
Well, look at this - only the smaller engines have the higher towing capacity - wonder why that is. Cooling, perhaps?
- Engine Options: 3.6-liter Pentastar V-6 or 2.0-liter Turbo
- Transmission: Six-speed manual or eight-speed automatic
- Configuration: Two-door or four-door
- Towing Capacity: 2,000 pounds1 (two-door), 3,500 to 5,000 pounds1 (four-door)
Even the dealer told my wife - if you do want to ever tow with it, get the 3.6. And I saw why, looking at the charts.
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So, the new JLU my wife has on order can tow 5,000 pounds!
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That's the same year they increase grill openings..............The Rubicon got the tow increase because of the full float rear axle first offered in 2024. I don't know why the JT didn't get the full float axle too.
Part of it - but can't be the whole story. The grill was also introduced then, and the JT tows well over 5,000 with the axles it has, and the Grand Cherokee 6,200 pounds with the 3.6 engine - it has better cooling capabilities.I thought Jeep adding the full float rear axle option is what enabled the 5K lb. towing bump from 3500lbs....
agh. JMR beat me to it.....
Pretty sure it also has to do with the rear axle. Has to be that new floater.If you click the little #1 it mentions that 3,500 lbs is the base configuration.
This page:
https://www.jeep.com/2026/wrangler/capability.html
Claims 5,000 pounds on a 4 door Rubicon when properly equipped. It neglects to mention what exactly 'properly equipped' is
Edit: I presume the 3.6L is the key, based on the post above.
(I have no dog in this race - I think Bill's logic is sound, but I'm not as devoted to finding a hill to die on).
Unreal ...just toss stuff out there with no real experience and no research or depth of knowledge on engine heat rejection and cooling,With 470 ft lbs compared to under 300 means the 6.4 would pull 7k like it isn't back there, keeping rpms down, and not working as hard as the lame 3.6 or the turbo 4. Seems like all this "on paper it does not work" crap is not real-world testing. I am sure a v8 with 3:50 or 3:73 final would easily pull 7k without overheating. I hate the word can't. That is failure. Can is a better word. If jeep wanted a v8 in the gladiator, it would be there. They would find a way to make it work. After all, they seem quite happy to stuff one in a Wrangler, and charge a premium for it.
Seems like the easiest answer then.I am sure if Jeep wanted to do it, it would be done.
Like I said, if they wanted to do it, they would do it. Jeep Wrangler 392 Extended Indefinitely, Gladiator to Gain V-8 Too
You are actually quoting that debunked garbage?Who are you exactly? You must be the guy who spends his whole life telling people what they can't do. Most of your posts seem to be a bunch of "You can't do this, you can't do that, it will never work." My real-world experience is putting big engines in small spaces several times over. 351s in Pintos, 350s in Vegas, s-10s and Volkswagen Beetles. Everyone had its challenges including cooling, driveshafts, brakes, exhaust and so on. I am sure if Jeep wanted to do it, it would be done.
Like I said, if they wanted to do it, they would do it. Jeep Wrangler 392 Extended Indefinitely, Gladiator to Gain V-8 Too
They don't have to sign anything. AMW likely promises nothing in regards to towing capacity as they aren't obligated to. I'm sure they perform admirably under most circumstances.I wish some of the people on here that have done the AMW swap would chime in on if they overheat on a daily basis?
Or if they have to sign a paper saying that they won’t tow anything?
I’ve never seen any complaints from AMW owners.
Do you understand how these things get the tow ratings that they do - the standard SAE test they must endure - fully loaded, up mountain inclines and so on............ Sure, I could stick a hemi in mine and tow just fine. But I'd likely fail the standardized testing in the mountains.I wish some of the people on here that have done the AMW swap would chime in on if they overheat on a daily basis?
Or if they have to sign a paper saying that they won’t tow anything?
I’ve never seen any complaints from AMW owners.
People are letting their emotions and "they could do it if they want to" get in the way of certain realities.They don't have to sign anything. AMW likely promises nothing in regards to towing capacity as they aren't obligated to. I'm sure they perform admirably under most circumstances.
Now, if someone wants to hook 7,500 pounds to the back of one and conduct whatever standardized test Jeep does and see if it performs - I'd like to see that too![]()
Yeah, you've told us that. So? Totally different circumstances. You had no restrictions at all. Nothing preventing you from cutting or fabricating or modifying to make it work, and, you were not having to pass specific testing.Who are you exactly? You must be the guy who spends his whole life telling people what they can't do. Most of your posts seem to be a bunch of "You can't do this, you can't do that, it will never work." My real-world experience is putting big engines in small spaces several times over. 351s in Pintos, 350s in Vegas, s-10s and Volkswagen Beetles. Everyone had its challenges including cooling, driveshafts, brakes, exhaust and so on. I am sure if Jeep wanted to do it, it would be done.