ecidiego
Well-Known Member
For some reason I am fine with the 3.6. I don't tow, though. Hauls plenty of ass in the desert.Gladiator is fine just need a decent engine. I have the diesel and love it. Just not sure how long it will last
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For some reason I am fine with the 3.6. I don't tow, though. Hauls plenty of ass in the desert.Gladiator is fine just need a decent engine. I have the diesel and love it. Just not sure how long it will last
That's why they say "If financial advisors were actually good at it, they wouldn't need your money"I’m in the financial business and we have the same group who make the same predictions constantly and eventually they are always right. But if you followed their advise the whole time you’d be broke and they’d have your money.
Thank you for the most profound comment in 130 posts. I couldn't agree more. ?The demand for mid-size trucks is at an all time high... but that doesn't explain why the JT languishes on lots across the country. (I think Jeep missed the buck on demand and over priced what it had, a colossal blunder by all accounts).
I hope they don't cancel but who knows. The thing that I find odd is how people think the Gladiator is sooooo expensive compared to a Tacoma, frontier or a Ranger, but lets think about what a Gladiator is. These Jeep trucks are performance inspired offroad machines. They have extremely capable diffs and suspension designs, and they climb! Some think that 50-60K is too much for a truck but that is where trucks are now. I used to have a Nissan Frontier and the New ones are over 50K now. All of the Gladiator peeps on here know what their trucks can do, so I don't even get why Tacomas are even in the conversation....
Although I'll never doubt your expertise on all things AMC, I will posit this: In the era of early unibodies (pre 1990 for this purpose) engineering a very crash safe unibody was more complicated and expensive than body on frame, and remained that way until robotic welding components became prevalent. The Eagle would have had most of its R&D (from a crash testing perspective) spread out over the Concord, right?That must be why AMC made only unibody cars for 30 years and took Jeep that direction with Cherokee and Grand Cherokee - because it's so much more expensive.
**snip**
Odd that a company always operating on a shoe string took the more expensive approach to auto manufacturing.
Going with every 2 weeks for a new one to pop up.Let's start a pool, or maybe two:
In the next 10 months, how many more "the Gladiator is doomed" threads will there be
and
how long or how many pages before this one gets boring and people jump to another to continue the arm-chair speculation and economic predictions, and explain how they'd take FCA forward to massive sales increases.
I never knew there were so many market and financial experts in the world! Impressive!
To look here, I wonder why FCA hasn't contacted a few and offered the position of CEO.
Said mostly in jest - or was it?
What wandering problem? There is no inherent solid axle wandering problem. Go back to the ZJ and WJ - solid axle, drove and rode like cars.3. Expanding on point 2, Jeep failed to fix the solid axle wandering issue (my F-350 with a Dana 80 front end rides way better than my Glad). The engine is a dog and has been from day one, yet they have spent $0.00 in engine development of the Gladiator/Wrangler. We know for a fact that Jeep is the money maker for Stelantis yet they refused to spend some of that capital on improvements. They just send the money back to Europe….
Yes, and a PHEV in 2025. That seems like an investment to me.Didn't someone on the forum say that they read the new contract terms that results in the Gladiator pretty much being guaranteed until 2028?
SP there are literally hundreds of posts on this forum about the steering wandering… Mine still wanders (albeit not as much as before the steering gear switch out).What wandering problem? There is no inherent solid axle wandering problem. Go back to the ZJ and WJ - solid axle, drove and rode like cars.
It's not inherent to the solid axle design because there's no geometrical reason for it.
It's only when people play with parts where this should be happening.
For the Gladiator - it was initially an issue with the steering gear.
But with the proper settings, there's not a reason in the world for a solid axle vehicle to wander vs. IFS.
Also disagree that the engine is a dog - maybe to those used to a V8 or a diesel - but it's really solid and strong compared to a lot of similar sized engines. It tows fine, plenty of power for most.
This is going to be what you are used to or expect. Very subjective topic. Jeeps aren't race vehicles.
Just to be clear, I didn't say all financial advisor were like that. There are some though who pretend they can predict markets future performance. Those of us who do put our clients first make no such pretentious.That's why they say "If financial advisors were actually good at it, they wouldn't need your money"
^^^ this!I haven’t read all 10 pages but IMHO here’s where Jeep step on its wiener…?
1. Jeep had the largest price increases in the last 3 years compared to any other manufacturer. They got greedy.
2. They sat on their corporate haunches while the rest of the mid size truck market innovated. The new Chevy/GMC trucks are nice and the new Taco will suck any potential buyers into the Toyota fold.
3. Expanding on point 2, Jeep failed to fix the solid axle wandering issue (my F-350 with a Dana 80 front end rides way better than my Glad). The engine is a dog and has been from day one, yet they have spent $0.00 in engine development of the Gladiator/Wrangler. We know for a fact that Jeep is the money maker for Stelantis yet they refused to spend some of that capital on improvements. They just send the money back to Europe….
I know that and understand that. However, it's not inherent with the solid axle. If yours wanders, then it's not the norm as the majority do not. Even a local service advisor said "they should not do that" when I took mine in for the steering gear fix - and it was a fix (after the second one)SP there are literally hundreds of posts on this forum about the steering wandering… Mine still wanders (albeit not as much as before the steering gear switch out).