The Last Cowboy
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Joe
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2020
- Threads
- 35
- Messages
- 7,452
- Reaction score
- 14,728
- Location
- San Antonio, TX
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 JL Willys 2 door
- Occupation
- Straight shooter with a crooked grin
The Thar looks like an ugly JK knockoff. If they could sell here for $20 to start, they'd sell well though.
Too bad Suzuki is out of the US market, the current Jimny would probably sell great. It's smaller than a Wrangler, but if it topped out below where a base Wrangler starts, there would be a lot on the road. I doubt it would pass safety standards here though. Although, it does in the EU.
So, should Jeep offer something like this, and keep the options to a soft top?
I really like it, but clearly it would pass new vehicle safety requirements.
So, would Jeep really consider "cheapening" the brand by offering something like a Wrangler SE? Base as base can be, marine vinyl seats, vinyl floor, steel wheels, bare dash with just gauges. But put M210/220 axles on it. The only options would be soft top and half doors, a phone mount where the current radio is, with a removable Bluetooth speaker in the dash and in the rear, and AC.
As good as it as it may sound to many here, I doubt it. New buyers want every option they can get, and many stretch themselves to have that "next level". Throughout the car industry now, it's rare to find a "stripper" model. Everyone wants features. Also, to be fair, it's cheaper and easier to build vehicles with power windows and locks that it is to put the mechanical window regulators in. Many of the parts needed to support higher priced options are already in place, making adding them nearly plug and play in many instances. It costs them more money to leave options off in some cases. Also, no manufacturer right now is going to pass on the opportunity to monitor everything you are doing in your vehicle, via the infotainment system, then selling that info to marketers, insurance companies, etc.
So, the base Wrangler, as it stands, is probably the last of it's kind. When steel wheels get more expensive than overseas made cast aluminum, they will be gone too. All new vehicles must have front collision avoidance, a suite of airbags, backup cameras, and ABS/ESC. Every few years more safety equipment gets mandated. The current base Wrangler isn't so base anymore. Even AC is standard as of 2024.
Too bad Suzuki is out of the US market, the current Jimny would probably sell great. It's smaller than a Wrangler, but if it topped out below where a base Wrangler starts, there would be a lot on the road. I doubt it would pass safety standards here though. Although, it does in the EU.
So, should Jeep offer something like this, and keep the options to a soft top?
I really like it, but clearly it would pass new vehicle safety requirements.
So, would Jeep really consider "cheapening" the brand by offering something like a Wrangler SE? Base as base can be, marine vinyl seats, vinyl floor, steel wheels, bare dash with just gauges. But put M210/220 axles on it. The only options would be soft top and half doors, a phone mount where the current radio is, with a removable Bluetooth speaker in the dash and in the rear, and AC.
As good as it as it may sound to many here, I doubt it. New buyers want every option they can get, and many stretch themselves to have that "next level". Throughout the car industry now, it's rare to find a "stripper" model. Everyone wants features. Also, to be fair, it's cheaper and easier to build vehicles with power windows and locks that it is to put the mechanical window regulators in. Many of the parts needed to support higher priced options are already in place, making adding them nearly plug and play in many instances. It costs them more money to leave options off in some cases. Also, no manufacturer right now is going to pass on the opportunity to monitor everything you are doing in your vehicle, via the infotainment system, then selling that info to marketers, insurance companies, etc.
So, the base Wrangler, as it stands, is probably the last of it's kind. When steel wheels get more expensive than overseas made cast aluminum, they will be gone too. All new vehicles must have front collision avoidance, a suite of airbags, backup cameras, and ABS/ESC. Every few years more safety equipment gets mandated. The current base Wrangler isn't so base anymore. Even AC is standard as of 2024.
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