No confirmation, but no way. That would mean a VERY long JT. Look at the 1/4 windows on the JL, way longer than the back doors of a 4 door. No need for as much space behind the rear seats in the truck.Might anyone be able to confirm or refute the idea--and if so why--that tops (hard and soft) for the JL (i.e. the new 2018 2 door) and the JT (i.e. the yet to be released Scrambler truck) might be one and the same?
It has been said by some in other threads and reviews that this is intentional. In an off-road situation you don't want the steering wheel jerked around with every bump and rock you encounter.I've just read another review complaining that the steering is slow off-center. For an electric-hydraulic system, is this the sort of problem that might get fine tuned during a production year, or is it more likely intrinsic to the design?
The most recent comment on this I read was in OffRoad Xtreme:It has been said by some in other threads and reviews that this is intentional. In an off-road situation you don't want the steering wheel jerked around with every bump and rock you encounter.
In the case of Tread Lightly, everything is 99% FWP.In what order do you calculate what your pay for your JL?
Assuming I get the JLU Sport at 1% under invoice, that is $29,656.44.
Are any options then added at 100% of FWP as defined by the order guide? Are options added at MSRP? Or, is everything 99% of FWP, base and options included?
Thanks!
And then add $40,000 for the JL Rubi = $52,415.70In the case of Tread Lightly, everything is 99% FWP.
Take that 99% FWP (vehicle + options) - say its $10k to keep things simple
Add $1195 destination - $11,195
add local/state taxes - (6% in the case of my state) - $11,866.70
add dealer fee - ($489 in my case) - $12,355.70
add state title / registration / plate fees - (lets just say $60)
Total is $12,415.70
Look at TFL most recent video on YouTube. They currently have a pre production Sahara with the pentastar and are getting great mileage. They just did a trip from Colorado to Moab over 300 miles and averaged like 22 mpg! I know it doesn't address the Rubicon but you can expect about pretty similar numbers slightly worse with aggressive tires on ruby. I'm getting mine as a daily also and I'm excited with the improvement even though you don't get a wrangler for the gas mileage obviously.I know mpg isn't important for wranglers but I'll be doing a lot of road driving and I'm basically pricing a sahara right up to a Rubicon so I'm looking at the little things now. Basically, will there be a difference in MPG for a Sahara (LSD, selectrac, all terrain tires) vs Rubicon?