The Last Cowboy
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Joe
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2020
- Threads
- 35
- Messages
- 7,456
- Reaction score
- 14,734
- Location
- San Antonio, TX
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 JL Willys 2 door
- Occupation
- Straight shooter with a crooked grin
2.0 turbo inline 4 for the altitude. Selectable full time 4x4 for the winter. Be prepared for the quirks of a Wrangler. Accept them and learn to love the vehicle for what it is, not what it costs.
Other choices would be a 2.3 inline 4 Ranger, a turbo diesel Gladiator and the aforementioned Subarus. Turbos are excellent at altitude, both of our turbo V6 Fords sprint up mountain passes with ease.
This is a Jeep site, so I recommend a 2.0 Wrangler. A 2 door of you are empty nesters. A 4 door if you often entertain visitors. Options colors and packages are up to you.
Expect better quality control than a Tesla, but far less refinement. If your carbon foorprint matters, consider a 4Xe, which combines a 2.0 turbo and an electric motor. It’s a plug in hybrid. You will be far happier driving in hybrid mode rather than going full electric.
Remember, a Wrangler has far more in common with a truck than the hatchback cars and wagons that pass as SUVs today. One of the reasons they are so popular is that Wranglers harken to a time gone by when driving was a more visceral experience that required more involvement from the person behind the wheel. If self driving is important, look elsewhere. Even an automatic transmission Wrangler with all of the tech and assist groups, requires an active driver.
Other choices would be a 2.3 inline 4 Ranger, a turbo diesel Gladiator and the aforementioned Subarus. Turbos are excellent at altitude, both of our turbo V6 Fords sprint up mountain passes with ease.
This is a Jeep site, so I recommend a 2.0 Wrangler. A 2 door of you are empty nesters. A 4 door if you often entertain visitors. Options colors and packages are up to you.
Expect better quality control than a Tesla, but far less refinement. If your carbon foorprint matters, consider a 4Xe, which combines a 2.0 turbo and an electric motor. It’s a plug in hybrid. You will be far happier driving in hybrid mode rather than going full electric.
Remember, a Wrangler has far more in common with a truck than the hatchback cars and wagons that pass as SUVs today. One of the reasons they are so popular is that Wranglers harken to a time gone by when driving was a more visceral experience that required more involvement from the person behind the wheel. If self driving is important, look elsewhere. Even an automatic transmission Wrangler with all of the tech and assist groups, requires an active driver.
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