orchidcrazy
Member
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2017
- Posts
- 46
- Reaction score
- 56
New member here as well, first post. Had a previous Cherokee many years ago in my single years - no issues for 100K then issues; never engine but everything electrical went. Had a 2003 Yukon XL in my married with 3 kids early years - 11 years, 196K miles, with only a bad fuel pump and alternator. Daughter of a mechanic, I replaced oddball things like the dash, the pump for the air leveling shocks, wiper motor. Loved the thing, reliable as all get out, babied it - detailed it all my own. Made the mistake of failing to baby the undercarriage though and it rusted like no other! CT refuses to use an additive in our road salt treatment to cut down on eating up vehicles - it ate mine up fast! (Lesson learned - under-carriage wash weekly in winter at a bare minimum).
Traded my baby for an 11 GC Limited with the Hemi engine that came off a lease. Expected electrical gremlins - not engine issues - had both. Jeep shut down on my daughter one day completely while driving on an exit ramp. My radio would suddenly switch to German for no reason. Couldn't keep headlights working on the right side. But the biggest issue, and one I am not sure if Jeep has completely resolved is the fuel management. The Hemi shuts down 4 cylinders to conserve gas, they may have a shut off for it in later years, not sure. Mine drove perfect on 4 cylinders but when all 8 were activated, it had a constant lag/hesitation - they call it a 'fishbite'. My son's 4 cylinder car could drive up a hill better than my Jeep with the big old Hemi in it. In the 3 years I had it, it spent probably 1/2 it's life at the dealer. They could recreate the problem quite simply - 8 cylinders, 1500 - 1750 rpms, normal driving on an incline - but could not resolve it. Labelled it 'normal' since other Jeeps do it as well. They did tell me I would have better luck with a newer model - engine changes - but I had it with Chrysler. It may have had a great 4WD system, it might have been able to crawl over rocks, but it couldn't drive up an incline without feeling like you were on square wheels.
Did buy my daughter a Jeep, btw, '04 Liberty - knew the windows would fall down and they did. Knew the issues with the gas tank exposed in the back so I addressed. The engine might eventually junk up but in the meantime the kids have a solid vehicle with great visibility in it when driving - no modern conveniences.
I recently traded my Jeep Hemi for a late year '16 Yukon SLT, used. I read all about buffeting, booming, etc. Test drove a bunch, looked for issues, bought used with some miles on it so I could track if someone else had problems with it. Opted for no sunroof, 18" wheels, 5.3 engine. I may have issues with the Yukon - but at least it drives forward without hesitation. Chrysler is no better than GMC for service - one isn't going to help you out anymore than the other.
Advice? Drive, drive, drive. Read up so you go into ownership of whatever with both eyes open. Personally, I wouldn't have any vehicle now without a long term warranty....
Best of luck!
Traded my baby for an 11 GC Limited with the Hemi engine that came off a lease. Expected electrical gremlins - not engine issues - had both. Jeep shut down on my daughter one day completely while driving on an exit ramp. My radio would suddenly switch to German for no reason. Couldn't keep headlights working on the right side. But the biggest issue, and one I am not sure if Jeep has completely resolved is the fuel management. The Hemi shuts down 4 cylinders to conserve gas, they may have a shut off for it in later years, not sure. Mine drove perfect on 4 cylinders but when all 8 were activated, it had a constant lag/hesitation - they call it a 'fishbite'. My son's 4 cylinder car could drive up a hill better than my Jeep with the big old Hemi in it. In the 3 years I had it, it spent probably 1/2 it's life at the dealer. They could recreate the problem quite simply - 8 cylinders, 1500 - 1750 rpms, normal driving on an incline - but could not resolve it. Labelled it 'normal' since other Jeeps do it as well. They did tell me I would have better luck with a newer model - engine changes - but I had it with Chrysler. It may have had a great 4WD system, it might have been able to crawl over rocks, but it couldn't drive up an incline without feeling like you were on square wheels.
Did buy my daughter a Jeep, btw, '04 Liberty - knew the windows would fall down and they did. Knew the issues with the gas tank exposed in the back so I addressed. The engine might eventually junk up but in the meantime the kids have a solid vehicle with great visibility in it when driving - no modern conveniences.
I recently traded my Jeep Hemi for a late year '16 Yukon SLT, used. I read all about buffeting, booming, etc. Test drove a bunch, looked for issues, bought used with some miles on it so I could track if someone else had problems with it. Opted for no sunroof, 18" wheels, 5.3 engine. I may have issues with the Yukon - but at least it drives forward without hesitation. Chrysler is no better than GMC for service - one isn't going to help you out anymore than the other.
Advice? Drive, drive, drive. Read up so you go into ownership of whatever with both eyes open. Personally, I wouldn't have any vehicle now without a long term warranty....
Best of luck!