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Jeep Patriot: Styling Impressions

97 messages,  Last post on Oct 02, 2007 at 11:30 AM

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What is this discussion about? Jeep Patriot, SUV


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#62 of 97
Re: Is it really a Cherokee? [pegacorn] by clarkkent
Apr 30, 2006 (6:29 pm)
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Replying to: pegacorn (Apr 30, 2006 5:52 pm)

I sure don't know what your smoking, but it isn't made out of rice!
 
I have a wrangler and a Cherokee and I'd take the ride and handling and road ability of both of those over a CRV (which I also owned) any day! Both of my Jeeps will go places your CRV couldn't even try.
 
That being said, You couldn't even drive your CRV in anything over a foot of snow here in Montana. My CRV would power out all the time.
 
As I said before, the CRV is for ladies who don't want to be stuck in and inch or two of snow.
 
I have driven my Cherokee 1991 on a 4k trip this summer. Great ride, great seats, plenty of power, lots of room.
 
It just comes down to the fact that here in the west there are lots of places I would feel uncomfortable going in the winter in a CRV for fear of getting stuck, should it snow. I take a Jeep. That way I know I'll not usually get stuck.
 
Very unusual, but once we had over 48" of snow. Yes 4 feet! It took me several hours and three sets of chains to get down my 1/4 drive. But with low range and 2 sets of chains on the front and one on the back of the Cherokee I got out. My 4x4 Subaru with a low range got 6 feet! IN IT'S LOW RANGE. No power. A CRV wouldn't have had a chance. I know they were not built for that type of snow, the Jeep wasn't either, but the Jeep got out. It took some time. Back and forth, snow was over the hood but it did get out. So the CRV is not an option if you really want a 4x4 you can trust to get you out or get you home in the winter in the west. + the CRV is built with the structural integrity of an aluminium beer can!. Don't tell me it isn't I had one. Maybe the newer ones are better but my 2001 was nothing more than a beer can on wheels.
 
Even my wife thought it was the most unsafe car we ever drove. If the CRV is good for you, Great. It's
just not strong or powerful enough for the mountains
 
Also used CRV's sell for about 25 under book out here. So they are a good buy for those ladies that don't want to be stuck in the snow.
#63 of 97
Re: Is it really a Cherokee? [clarkkent] by pegacorn
Apr 30, 2006 (9:15 pm)
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Replying to: clarkkent (Apr 30, 2006 6:29 pm)

I'm not sure why you're telling me about life on the road to Larry, Darryl, and Darryl's house.
 
The CR-V is NOT, I repeat NOT an offroad vehicle. I thought that was a given, but you seem to be arguing with a your straw man perception of my post. So, lets take it down the line again.
 
CR-Vs are NOT offroaders. A Cherokee or Wrangler cannot:
 
- Approach 27+ mpg on the highway, save for the early models of the XJ with the Renault sourced diesel.
 
- Carry passengers in the same comfort. Less legroom, awful back seat (no headrests for Chrissake!), small trunk with tire intruding on space, bulbous center hump through entire vehicle, narrow doors.
 
- Offer same road experience. Awkward ergonomics (they were still using 80's GM-style controls until at least the 97 models; that was replaced by Neon-esque interior which lives on in almost identical form in the '06 Wrangler)
 
- Offer the same supple ride. The solid axles of the Cherokee are not the choice for a compliant ride. They are jittery on rough surfaces, though not as bad as a leaf-sprunk axle under an empty pickup bed. There's a reason that solid axles are not used in passenger cars anymore. They are crude and unrefined... for an application which requires extreme strength, they are marvelous. For a road vehicle, they are terrible.
 
- Offer the same steering feel. The XJ's used recirculating ball steering, with a very slow ratio for maximum precision in precarious tracking, and with extra play and numb feedback to keep jarring impacts from transmitting from the tires to your wristbones. Once you touch pavement, the steering is absolutely horrendous. Get out on the highway, and whip the wheel to and fro through about 5-10 degrees of rotation. Pure slop!
 
The CR-V, on the other hand, is slighty more adept than a typical FWD car in nasty conditions. I don't live in Montana, and barring outbreak of nuclear war, will not. I don't like dealing with the snow in the suburban midwest, being a native sun-belter. You can see from our geographic origins alone that we are looking at two entirely different concepts of a vehicle.
 
For you, an all-terrain capable SUV is a necessity to claw over the river and through the woods of America's Siberia. To me, it's a suburban street car with some extra capabilites for weekend fun. To you, a crossover ute is a wannabe that can't handle your daily needs. For me, it's the perfect best-of-both-worlds blend. It is all the advantages of the SUV form and packaging without the liabilities.
 
You keep talking about the mountains, but there are no mountains here... my Honda has seen mountains twice, and they were pansy Appalacians as experienced on a dynamite blasted interstate grade. It doesn't matter if there is snow piled up, as the plow will be here before I leave the house! I could just as easily drive a car, except:
 
A - the CR-V does better on ice. Not avalanches of snow, but simple freezing rain. Chains are irrelevant... they are banned in this state because they are not needed and damage roads.
 
B - I traded in my pickup, and I need the space to haul bulky items. With the seats folded flat, I have a great deal of space.
 
C - At 6'2, I don't have much headroom in short cars.
 
Don't get the impression that I am slamming the XJ either. If you have the need for what is essentially an ATV with a weathershell, it is hard to beat. Every single issue which makes it a poor street vehicle allows it to shine in rough conditions. It's on-road performance is simply wretched, and with the large numbers of 4x2, 4 door automatic XJ that were produced, it was clearly most often bought as an alternative to a passenger car, not as, well, a Jeep.
#64 of 97
Re: Patriot vs. Cherokee [gljvd] by rsholland
May 01, 2006 (5:43 am)
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Replying to: gljvd (Apr 30, 2006 11:24 am)

The Caliber also has the 2.4 engine as well as a turbo 2.4 engine. Regardless, don't expect a 5K tow package. I hope you can get an optional 3.5K tow package though.
 
Bob
#65 of 97
Re: Is it really a Cherokee? [pegacorn] by clarkkent
May 01, 2006 (7:18 am)
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Replying to: pegacorn (Apr 30, 2006 9:15 pm)

HOw about this. I agree with almost everything in your lastest post. I do however feel that my cherokee is a very good comfortable tons of room highway car. But when we need a real highway cruiser, we have a grand Cherokee also. The wrangler is really for fun. I agree not a real traveling car.
 
The CRV VS. Jeep is not a true test, as they are two completely different rigs.
 
You might take a look at the new Patriot. Has all kinds of new stuff for a very good highway ride. Roll midigation<sp. etc.
#66 of 97
Re: Patriot vs. Cherokee [rsholland] by gljvd
May 01, 2006 (9:51 am)
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Replying to: rsholland (May 01, 2006 5:43 am)

The Caliber also has the 2.4 engine as well as a turbo 2.4 engine. Regardless, don't expect a 5K tow package. I hope you can get an optional 3.5K tow package though.
 
Yes but the 1.8 is standard . I would expect the power train and towing set up to be built around that engine instead of the 2.4 and turbo .
 
I doubt we will get 5k , however I think we will get more than 1k .
#67 of 97
Re: Patirot or ? Rabbit ? [what2choose] by claudius753
May 03, 2006 (5:01 pm)
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Replying to: what2choose (Apr 29, 2006 7:16 am)

I think the Rabbit would be a good choice if you don't need or want AWD. VW's reliability is supposedly not as good as it used to be, but they make very impressive interiors and ride quite well. A Rabbit diesel would give you great mpg. I really like the idea of a 5 door GTI with 2.0T and DSG, but that is pretty pricey.
 
The Patriot isn't really a good choice for a FWD vehicle, plus the gas mileage is fairly low probably under 25 combined.
 
I was interested in how the Elantra was going to turn out, but upon it's unvieling its a bit bland looking and I don't like the modest 4AT and 2.0L engine, they should have gone with a GEMA engine.
#68 of 97
gas milage by werm9
May 14, 2006 (1:39 pm)
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is there anything about gas milage results on either the patriot or the compass?
#69 of 97
Re: gas milage [werm9] by gljvd
May 14, 2006 (5:06 pm)
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Replying to: werm9 (May 14, 2006 1:39 pm)

I think the compass is going on sale around june or july so we should get info on that soon. Mabye the end of may .
 
I'm going to assume its close to the same as the caliber with the 2.4 l engine , the low 20s
#70 of 97
asdf by werm9
May 14, 2006 (6:59 pm)
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its somthing they should have released when the specs went public. i think it was somwhere in this forums i read that it may get up to 30mpg. car and driver reported a 21.5 mpg average/ the caliber which is basically the same thing as a compass engine and transmission wise. and it being bigger and heavier it should acutally get worse gas milage than the caliber. worse than 21.5? no ty jeep. i was actually going to buy a caliber but afte car and drivers results i won't be getting one now
#71 of 97
EPA estimates for a Caliber with the 2.4 engine by sturm_ruger
May 27, 2006 (11:26 am)
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and CVT2 automatic are 23 city / 26 hwy. The Patriot with the same engine and a 5-speed manual trans should be close to those numbers, perhaps even slightly better.

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