Grand Cherokee Moose Test
Grand Cherokee Moose Test
Author
Discussion

2.5pi

Original Poster:

1,091 posts

205 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
Not sure if this has been posted but Jeep have a major problem;

http://www.teknikensvarld.se/jeepmoosetest-part4/

Scary

MagnaJeep

309 posts

177 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
Great way to find a solution for the problem, calling the people incompetent who do these tests daily.
Didn't Dacia have the same problem with a Logan, caused by oem tyres?

GravelBen

16,346 posts

253 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
IIRC (from when this was actually recent news) neither Chrysler's engineers or the magazine that did it could replicate the result in further testing. Chrysler were very keen to find out what had caused it, the best explanation anyone cold come up with might have been a glitch in the stability/anti-roll software?

Edited by GravelBen on Friday 10th August 12:54

2.5pi

Original Poster:

1,091 posts

205 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
GravelBen said:
IIRC (from when this was actually recent news) neither Chrysler's engineers or the magazine that did it could replicate the result in further testing. Chrysler were very keen to find out what had caused it, the best explanation anyone cold come up with might have been a glitch in the stability/anti-roll software?

Edited by GravelBen on Friday 10th August 12:54
On the video they show the Chrysler engineers interrogating the ECU and then repeating the test 7 times all with the same disastrous result smile

900T-R

20,406 posts

280 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
Not a single blow out... 6 blow outs in 7 tries IIRC.

MissChief

7,840 posts

191 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
Wasn't the car laoded up with the combined weight of four NFL linebackers and enough luggage for a three week stay in the Arctic as sandbags in the boot or something?

300bhp/ton

41,030 posts

213 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
Has anyone ever tried the Moose test with a superbike? Would it be any safer?

Krikkit

27,838 posts

204 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
MissChief said:
Wasn't the car laoded up with the combined weight of four NFL linebackers and enough luggage for a three week stay in the Arctic as sandbags in the boot or something?
But still less than the rated weight for the vehicle - regardless of how you slice it, that's dangerous. 5 lardy passengers and a boot full of luggage can easily get close, especially in its home market.

900T-R

20,406 posts

280 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
300bhp/ton said:
Has anyone ever tried the Moose test with a superbike? Would it be any safer?
I wouldn't think emergency lane changes would be such an issue with something as narrow as a bike...

DeadMeat_UK

3,058 posts

305 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
I didn't read the article, but I'm assuming the content proves a theory.

My friend has a Grand Cherokee and his girlfriend is in fact a moose. I told him he should have bought a sports car.

900T-R

20,406 posts

280 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all


A moose test in Sweden, yesterday

DeadMeat_UK

3,058 posts

305 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
Krikkit said:
MissChief said:
Wasn't the car laoded up with the combined weight of four NFL linebackers and enough luggage for a three week stay in the Arctic as sandbags in the boot or something?
But still less than the rated weight for the vehicle - regardless of how you slice it, that's dangerous. 5 lardy passengers and a boot full of luggage can easily get close, especially in its home market.
Agreed. I've seen them turn up at ski resorts (and in fact loaded similar hire cars up with ski gear and people). I doubt we were far off this max weight, also with ski racks on the roof or roof boxes you could make the CoG even higher.

Scary.


300bhp/ton

41,030 posts

213 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
900T-R said:
I wouldn't think emergency lane changes would be such an issue with something as narrow as a bike...
Would be if a mouse stepped out in front of you on a single carriageway road.

KB_S1

5,967 posts

252 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
Very poor results.
Not even particularly high speed, certainly wouldn't expect the tyre to come off rim.

GTIR

24,741 posts

289 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
I thought its an "Elk test"?

Krikkit

27,838 posts

204 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
DeadMeat_UK said:
Krikkit said:
MissChief said:
Wasn't the car laoded up with the combined weight of four NFL linebackers and enough luggage for a three week stay in the Arctic as sandbags in the boot or something?
But still less than the rated weight for the vehicle - regardless of how you slice it, that's dangerous. 5 lardy passengers and a boot full of luggage can easily get close, especially in its home market.
Agreed. I've seen them turn up at ski resorts (and in fact loaded similar hire cars up with ski gear and people). I doubt we were far off this max weight, also with ski racks on the roof or roof boxes you could make the CoG even higher.

Scary.
Good point - filling the boot with sand has kept the CoG down already, put real people in there, coupled with a boot and roofbox with heavy crap in and that'll raise it up further for comedy handling.

900T-R

20,406 posts

280 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
300bhp/ton said:
Would be if a mouse stepped out in front of you on a single carriageway road.
A person on a bike would require just the gentlest nudge to end up either side of the mouse, a bit different when you're driving a 2 metres wide SUV...

aizvara

2,067 posts

190 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
GTIR said:
I thought its an "Elk test"?
Swedish people say Älg, UK people say Elk or Moose. US people say Moose.

300bhp/ton

41,030 posts

213 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
Krikkit said:
Good point - filling the boot with sand has kept the CoG down already, put real people in there, coupled with a boot and roofbox with heavy crap in and that'll raise it up further for comedy handling.
I'd still like to see such an evasion test though, I suspect we won't as my hunch is the bike may well fair no better than the Jeep or Merc A Class did.

Krikkit

27,838 posts

204 months

Friday 10th August 2012
quotequote all
No, probably not, but bikes are an inherently more risky thing to take out onto the road. This is a large vehicle no doubt sold as being safe.

Should we have bike crash tests too?