Ever since the original Jeep got
its discharge papers from the U.S. Army, the various owners of the Jeep
brand have been trying to find new shapes and uses for the Jeep name
beyond military life Before World War II ended, a designer for Jeep
builder Willys-Overland came up with a sketch of a two-seat roadster
that became the Jeepster.
Through the decades, other
experiments have followed — Comanche, Commando, later Commander and
Liberty. And today, Jeep's owner Fiat-Chrysler revealed it's first
original attempt at a new Jeep, one built with U.S. engineering and
Italian assembly for world consumption. Meet the 2015 Jeep Renegade.
Sized for the small SUV market — checking in a wee bit larger than the Nissan Juke — the Renegade uses an
all-new chassis design meant to accommodate vehicles with four wheel
drive. In the past, chassis like these have been the downfall of Jeep
spinoffs, offering a compromised off-road performance while still
carrying the weight and efficiency penalty that every trail-riding truck
must.
Here, Fiat has done as it did with the successful new Cherokee,
setting aside a "Trailhawk" model for those who want hard-core climbing
in a cute package. How hard core? The Trailhawks can ford 19 inches of
water (the Wrangler can handle 30 inches, slowly), roll with 8 inches of
ground clearance and dig for traction with a special four-wheel-drive
system featuring a 20:1 crawl ratio.
And isn't it cute? Unlike the
Jeep Cherokee, Jeep designers stuck to the old playbook with the
Renegade — avoiding alien slit lights for reviving Jeep's classic
seven-bar grille and round headlamps, which flow into an upright body.
Out back, there's a little too much effort in the rear taillamps, but
the interior felt well sorted during a brief preview, with all the
standard software and safety accoutrements like blind spot monitoring.
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