Jeep Wrangler Rubicon: Spotted
You can barely move for new softroaders these days. A secondhand Rubicon is the antidote
What with Sam having driven the new Wrangler just a couple of weeks ago and Mopar having brought its fantastic Wrangler 1941 to Geneva, my appetite for uncompromising American 4x4s has been thoroughly whetted. It seems I wasn't the only one, either.
A number of commenters on the first drive signaled that they liked the car, but couldn't find a way to rationalise its near £50k price tag. Scrof took a shot at finding a half priced alternative in last week's Trade Off, settling, naturally, on a Land Rover Defender. But what if only a Jeep will do?
That's where today's Spotted comes in. At £35,955 it still isn't cheap, but manages to represent a significant saving versus the new model nonetheless. That's despite being virtually new itself; a 2018 three-door version with just 4,800 miles on the clock. Most importantly, though, it's a Rubicon. Named after the 22-mile off-road trail, rather than the Italian river of no return, the title of Rubicon is only awarded to the most capable Wranglers in the range
Powered by a 3.6-litre petrol V6, the Rubicon outputs 285hp and 260lb ft of torque via either a six-speed manual or five-speed automatic transmission (the UK was auto only). There are 17-inch aluminum wheels wrapped in 32-inch mud-terrain tyres as standard, locking front and rear axles, Jeep's Rock-Trac 4x4 system featuring beefed up suspension, an electronically disconnecting front sway bar, rock rails and LED lights.
This being the Recon Edition it trades cloth seats for heated leather ones with red seat belts. It also gains a heavy-duty Dana 44 front axle, cast diff covers, power dome bonnet and a premium soft-top which the hard top seen here can be switched out for. Throw in the remainder of the factory warranty, which runs for two more years till 2021, and what you're looking at is one of the most able, best equipped Jeeps you're likely to see without spending twice the price on some heavily modified rock-crawling juggernaut. We know where our money would go.
SPECIFICATIONS - JEEP WRANGLER RUBICON
Engine: 3,604cc, V6
Transmission: 5-speed automatic, all-wheel drive
Power (hp): 285@6,400rpm
Torque (lb ft): 260@4,800rpm
MPG: 24.4
CO2: N/A
First registered: 2018
Recorded mileage: 4,800
Yours for: £35,995
If you don't ever go above 40mph and/or love rock-crawling or posing on beaches, go ahead. Otherwise buy a brand-new Jimny (or two) and spend the change on a holiday to America where it might just about make sense to hire one for a few days.
If you don't ever go above 40mph and/or love rock-crawling or posing on beaches, go ahead. Otherwise buy a brand-new Jimny (or two) and spend the change on a holiday to America where it might just about make sense to hire one for a few days.
Wrangler Total US Sales
2018 . . . 240,032
2017 . . . 190,522
2016 . . . 191,788
2015 . . . 202,702
2014 . . . 175,328
2013 . . . 155,502
2012 . . . 141,669
2011 . . . 122,460
2010 . . . .. 94,310
2009 . . . .. 82,044
Then we took the 101 south to San Jose, and it's not a motorway car. The engine (in our one) was underpowered, the auto gearbox didn't know where to place itself, and the suspension was choppy - nowhere near as soft as those tyres would have you believe.
I'd drive one (& did), but I wouldn't pay for one.
If you don't ever go above 40mph and/or love rock-crawling or posing on beaches, go ahead. Otherwise buy a brand-new Jimny (or two) and spend the change on a holiday to America where it might just about make sense to hire one for a few days.
They are awesome vehicles and really not half as bad on road as some are making out. They are easily as good a Discovery 1. And a Discovery 1 is just a Range Rover classic in a different frock. And people rarely moan about how an RRC goes on the road. The Jeep is arguably much better in many respects. And off road, in Rubicon guise it 2 levels higher than a stock RRC.
Wrangler Total US Sales
2018 . . . 240,032
2017 . . . 190,522
2016 . . . 191,788
2015 . . . 202,702
2014 . . . 175,328
2013 . . . 155,502
2012 . . . 141,669
2011 . . . 122,460
2010 . . . .. 94,310
2009 . . . .. 82,044
A live axle vehicle will handle and feel very different to one with independent suspension. If you aren't used to this, then maybe it felt odd to you, but that doesn't mean it wasn't capable.
I'm not knocking you for not liking it, that is of course your personal choice. The Jeeps, including the JK and other live axle 4x4's I've driven and owned (have 3 at the moment) are all very enjoyable cars to drive and B roads are often places they excel.
I think it's a real stretch to suggest it they 'excel' on anything other than the most broken of B roads, in my opinion - I don't disagree they could be fun, and there are time where live axles might be an advantage. If I had to be kind the FM reception for the radio was pretty good thanks to the long aerial, and the road noise wasn't bad, the removable panels seal well considering. I just cannot square the price against what you (don't) get. I'd happily take the same cash and enjoy a new Land Cruiser Utility.
I think it's a real stretch to suggest it they 'excel' on anything other than the most broken of B roads, in my opinion - I don't disagree they could be fun, and there are time where live axles might be an advantage. If I had to be kind the FM reception for the radio was pretty good thanks to the long aerial, and the road noise wasn't bad, the removable panels seal well considering. I just cannot square the price against what you (don't) get. I'd happily take the same cash and enjoy a new Land Cruiser Utility.
I drive a Defender day to day and it's more comfortable than my Lotus Exige V6 was, massively so.
I have a new 992 on order and will probably choose between than and the Defender day to day.
People who criticise them and cars like them just have no real idea about what these cars are or why they're set up the way they are. They're set up to be bashed about off road and not break. Not for cornering on b roads. If you want that... Buy a fking sports car.
Live axle 4x4's might "jiggle" and "shudder" more over bumps due to the live axle. But they generally remain very well planted. Any choppiness in ride will be down to the wheelbase. The SWB Wrangler is still only 95".
I'm just unsure what your real beef is with how they go, seems more like you have an agenda.
As for the price, yes utterly stupid. But UK customers seem to get ripped off on many products from either the USA or Japan and this is a good example of that.
I drive a Defender day to day and it's more comfortable than my Lotus Exige V6 was, massively so.
I have a new 992 on order and will probably choose between than and the Defender day to day.
People who criticise them and cars like them just have no real idea about what these cars are or why they're set up the way they are. They're set up to be bashed about off road and not break. Not for cornering on b roads. If you want that... Buy a fking sports car.
The Jeeps I've driven have been equally as good. The biggest downside with the Wrangler is it is only 2wd for road use, so far more likely to want to kick it's tail out.
When I ran my XJ Cherokee I could run it in 2wd or 4wd on the road as it had a centre diff (like a Defender). It had live axles front and rear and even leaf springs at the back. Although a slightly longer wheelbase than a SWB Wrangler. It felt nothing but planted on the road and was in many ways quite a sleeper out on the country lanes.
At a mostly tarmac event, the Jeep ran quicker stage times than two of the three MX-5's competing.
The JK's I've been in have been equally as good.
The fact that these cost, new, near enough the same as a Discovery is pretty shocking. And whilst I know they cater to slightly different markets, they're a size class apart at least in terms of what market sector they fit into.
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