Mr Miami
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #16
Excellent points. And I know there was the issue, as you mention, with "Jeep brand managers ...." hesitant about changing the look of the Gladiator and Wrangler.1. The platform isn't engineered for a V8 w/o heavy re-engineering; the 392 Wrangler isn't a plug-n-play V6 to V8 swap either.
2. CAFE, crash testing, and other regulations to be satisfied at a heavy cost
3. Stellantis' idiotic EV-First direction from previous management that killed/delayed anything fun
4. The mandate from Jeep brand managers to engineers and designers about the look of the Gladiator and Wrangler must remain very, very similar hampered V8 integration.
5. Market size doesn't produce a viable break-even point
But if you have an extra $35k lying around and live in emission-free area, you can get it done in a couple months.
In the next version of the Wrangler/Gladiator (due in '27, 28?), adding an inch or two in width and/or length to the Wrangler/Gladiator to more easily accommodate a V8 should not materially alter the look of the vehicles. After bastardizing the TJ the way they did (still glad I have my baby in the yard), I don't think an inch or two here and there is going to make one bit of difference in current "looks."
Come to think of it, and I'm sure this has been discussed here many times, it seems strange to me that in the mid-late '70's they could put the 304 V8 into the CJ7 (loved to drive my best friend's CJ7 in the Jersey swamps and Pine Barrens. Better than my new '76 Gladiator pickup with the 360 2 barrel). I guess the 304 was a smaller engine but then the CJ7 was also a much smaller vehicle.
Enough rambling and reminiscing about the past and what you could buy. It's a new day, a different time.
Sponsored
