Wednesday, 11 March 2015

New generation Jeep Wrangler will keep Solid Axles but loose foldable windshield


With the release of more details about the new generation of the Jeep Wrangler there comes good and bad news.

The Good news is, it will keep the solid axles which will make many Jeep fans gasp with relieve.

However one major factor that the wrangler has always been unique for and was present since the grand Father Willys was first produced, is the down folding wind shield. This is a bit of a shame since you do not get any 4x4 that still features this possibility.

Although most Wrangler drivers might not even know about this possibility in their Jeep, according to the newest releases this feature will soon be one of the past.

Source: roadandtrack.com

Among the key design features of the Jeep Wrangler, we'd say the solid-axle suspension is several orders of magnitude more important than the cool-but-perhaps-not-critical folding windshield. To that end, a recent Automotive News report should be mostly good news for the Jeep faithful.

The report states that the Wrangler will keep its solid front and rear axles when the vehicle is redesigned for the 2017 model year. That will have true believers breathing a sigh of relief, as Jeep had already ditched the solid axles in its other models.

The Grand Cherokee switched to an independent front suspension with the 2005 redesign, and lost its solid rear axle with the arrival of the current generation, for 2011. Meanwhile, Jeep dropped the solid front axle in the transition from the XJ Cherokee to the Liberty, and then went to a four-wheel independent setup when the Liberty was replaced with the new Cherokee.

Although the solid axles stay on, weight savings and improved fuel economy are major goals for the next-generation Wrangler—not a bad idea, given the current model's 17/21 mpg EPA ratings. To that end, the new Jeep will get an aluminum body; a smaller, turbocharged engine in place of the current 3.6-liter V6; and will upgrade to an eight-speed automatic.

The good news on the axle front is tempered, however, by word that the Wrangler will lose its upright, folding windshield in favor of a fixed unit with greater rake. While it's true that many Jeep owners probably don't even how that their windshield can be folded down—or wouldn't know how to do it—the folded-windshield driving experience is one of the things that makes the Wrangler unique. It's up there with the removable doors and convertible top—both of which had better stick around.

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