February 5, 2011
It's only money
Roger Winslade, proprietor of the Jeep Woodhill 4WD Park near Auckland was telling me yesterday that he recently had a bunch of Japanese visitors fly in, go for a ride in the park's Hagglund Personnel Carrier and fly back home. The Swedish tracked Hagglund makes even the most extreme of our 4WDs look pretty feeble, but that's a lot of money and a long way to go for a ride in something different. Good job the guy with the credit cards was some sort of restaurant zillionaire. Here's a video on the Hagglund.
January 31, 2011
Not a sheep joke
I've been spraying the underneath of the Wrangler with a sheep byproduct that I'm hoping will help keep rust away. Lanolin is a good rust preventive, as many farmers already know. Lanolin is a greasy, waxy substance taken from sheep wool after shearing. In Tauranga, ProLan NZ manufactures a range of lanolin lubricants, corrosion inhibitors and anti-seizes and it was to this helpful company that I went for my $84 four-litre can of liquid lanolin, plus a spray applicator. Mostly, ProLan can be wiped on, but the spray is good for reaching difficult spots. I've done the entire chassis and the ARB bumpers a couple of times now, and still have heaps left in the container. The waxy residue certainly feels like it will do the job, but only time will tell.
Update: Six months on, the trigger mechanism of the sprayer started leaking badly, wasting a lot of the product. I emailed ProLan to ask if this was to be expected. Apparently it isn't and they had a new unit and spare trigger mechanism on its way by courier next morning, at no cost. Great customer service, guys!
Update: Six months on, the trigger mechanism of the sprayer started leaking badly, wasting a lot of the product. I emailed ProLan to ask if this was to be expected. Apparently it isn't and they had a new unit and spare trigger mechanism on its way by courier next morning, at no cost. Great customer service, guys!
There's no stopping the SUV says MTA
Despite the rising cost of fuel, New Zealanders seem more committed to the idea of an SUV as their personal choice for transport, says the Motor Trade Association (MTA). Its analysis of the new car market over the last five years shows owners have taken to SUVs in "steadily increasing numbers" and they now sit just behind small cars as the largest segment. Sales in 2010 totalled almost 11,500 units. The MTA includes soft off-roaders in the SUV mix. Growth from 20 per cent to 26 per cent of overall new car sales over five years is not surprising says MTA spokesman Ian Stronach. “The trend towards SUVs is well established in overseas markets and has been for some time. We’ve basically just followed that growth in popularity. As more models become available, it may become the most popular class of vehicle on the market.”
Some of this growth appears to have come at the expense of smaller, and more fuel efficient vehicles. During 2010, the small car segment (typically under 1.5 litres) dropped from 29 per cent to 27 per cent of the new car market, with the light segment (typically 1.6 – 2.0 litres) falling from 20 per cent to 17 per cent.
January 30, 2011
Grand Cherokee catches up, forges ahead
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| The leading Grand Cherokee has its air suspension pumped up. Compare the space in the wheel wells to the one behind, at normal ride height. Some 104mm of lift is available from 'park' level. |
• Considerable off-road ability
• Try the new V6 before ordering the V8
The outgoing Grand Cherokee was remarkable off-road for its electronic traction control setup – one of the best in the business. Otherwise, there wasn't a lot to tell it apart from its rivals, other than the Jeep was very obviously American and the others weren't! Now, the Grand Cherokee has evolved and adds some really good on-road/off-road stuff. This includes an all-independent off-road-ready suspension that uses airbags on some models for adjustable height; the first appearance of the Chrysler-family Pentastar V6; electronics to set the vehicle up for different types of off-road terrain; a new platform developed during the Daimler days; a scorching on-road sports mode; and major improvements to the room and quality of the five-seat interior.
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| Lots of cargo room with the seats flat. Wheel wells intrude a bit, though. |
Over in Tasmania for the Australasian launch, I drove a V8 Limited specified just as we're getting them in New Zealand and its off-road abilities were notable. This was due to two things. First, the Quadra-Lift air suspension (which is not fitted to our V6 model) offers excellent ground clearance; its highest setting better than my lifted Rubicon. It goes up in two stages, the first offering 33mm more clearance, the second, another 65mm. On the other hand, it will drop to 40mm below normal to help people get in and out, or to help hitch the towball to the trailer. Second, an extremely well sorted hill descent control allows the Grand to idle down steep descents with the ease of a manual Rubicon in low first – which is to say, at a crawl (Speeds range from 2km/h in low first, according to the specifications, to 12km/h in Drive). These attributes are augmented by one of the best electronic traction control systems in the business and a system, Selec-Terrain, to tune the vehicle to the tails conditions.
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| Nerve centre for Selec-Terrain. Click on picture to get a big view. |
On the road, the all-independent suspension, along with 20-inch Kumho Solus road tyres of the V8, really help the new SUV, although that's not so say the old one was bad. 4wdNewz readers will know that 20-inch is an iffy rim size as the choice of tread patterns is limited. Fortunately, for $2500, Jeep will sell you an off-road adventure group comprising 18-inch alloys and underbody skid plates, although with all that clearance the plates might almost be superfluous. The V6 comes with 18s.
New Zealand gets three versions, with a fourth, the mighty SRT-8, in the offing for 2012. The three available this year are all in Limited trim, New Zealand for now deciding to pass on the base Laredo the Aussies are taking. The one with the Pentastar is $79,990. This 24-valve alloy V6 produces 213kW and 353Nm of torque at a rather high 4800rpm. A version will be dropped into the JK Wrangler, possibly next year, as a running change. On the road it performs far better than is specification might suggest and has good mid-range torque. The V6 version does without the air suspension.
Jeep sees the bulk of its business here in the $86,990 Limited with the upgraded 5.7 litre multi-displacement Hemi V8 producing 262kW and 520Nm of torque at 4250rpm. Coming later this year is a new diesel, replacing the Mercedes unit in the previous model. Jeep goes back to the Italian VM company for this one, a 3.0 CRD producing 167kW and 540Nm at just 1600rpm. It could be the pick of the crop. Price is yet to be determined.
For those wanting to tow, the V8 and diesel are rated for 3500kg braked, the V6 for 2268kg.
Its good to see Jeep back on track, so to speak, with a worthwhile replacement for the outgoing Grand Cherokee, especially after the dreary KK Cherokee in 2008.
Here's another post on the King Jeep.
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| It's nice inside, with better materials and better use of space. |
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| This is hardly a steep descent, but the hill descent control is up to any task, works in any gear including reverse, and even in neutral. |
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| My drive mate is using power to get up this sandhill, but the excellent traction control would have allowed a gentler technique. |
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