Home - Car Reviews - 2007 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara 4x4 Road Test
2007 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara 4x4 Road Test
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Iwas all smiles when I picked it up. It looks great, in a rough, tough utilitarian way. It’s not overly muscular like the Hummer H3 and isn’t overtly retro like the FJ Cruiser, but rather the Wrangler Unlimited presents a confident, purposeful image that’s inherently retro due to minimal upgrades over its sixty plus year existence. More importantly it’s more functional that most in this class, with greater interior volume than the FJ, as well as real rear doors, and it’s about as capable off road as anything on four wheels. The sweetest thing on top of it
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| Cool? For sure. Off-roading Jeeps always rate highly on my list. (Photo: Trevor Hofmann, American Auto Press) |
The hardtop that I pulled apart at the launch program and lifted over my head for my TV viewers to see, appeared well put together and, being made of modern composites, the latest weather-sealing materials and, no doubt, better epoxies than the T-tops of my youth, who would have thought that it would leak like a sieve. After all, it was sunny and warm in California, not the continual torrential downpours that we’ve once again become reacclimatized to on the northwest coast. The rain poured, and poured, and poured, and after pouring some more, and despite being stored in my nice, dry carport when not in use, enough water started streaming in between the seams of the Freedom Top Modular Hardtop that we renamed it the Free-Flow Top instead. It began up front, with the water pooling up on top of the lower console, particularly drenchingthe auto shifter, and then the wet stuff started pouring in from the rearmost edge of the passenger-side removable roof panel, landing on the passenger seat headrest. Could it just be a problem with my particular test vehicle? No, unfortunately not. I phoned someone I know in the service department
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| There's nowhere to go off-road in the city, but that doesn't mean the new Wrangler isn't fun... (Photo: Trevor Hofmann, American Auto Press) |
Thenext problem happened on the way home from Christmas shopping, and it took me by complete shock. You’ve got to appreciate that I test more than a hundred cars per year, probably closer to two-hundred, and I haven’t yet experienced a modern vehicle that has the ability to lock its keys inside while still running! Actually, most new cars, trucks, SUVs, crossovers and vans won’t allow you to lock your keys inside at all, let alone while at idle, but I learned something that night. I had pulled over behind Jennifer who was with my son Kaden in a new Saturn Sky Red Line (tons of fun
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| OK, well, it isn't fun when the car decides to do an impromptu Chinese water torture. (Photo: Trevor Hofmann, American Auto Press) |
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| Or when it locks your keys in your car by itself... with the engine running. (Photo: Trevor Hofmann, American Auto Press) |
Oh, and that rear cargo door that I beefed about after first driving the new Wrangler?I’ve confirmed the obvious after a week of family duty. Its right-hinged configuration is ideal for Japan and Britain, plus a number of other jurisdictions, but is unnecessarily awkward for the countries where it will sell strongest, namely the U.S., Canada and Mexico. Heck, throw in all of continental Europe and China while we’re at it, as they drive in the right-hand lane just like we do. Why the concern? Well, when you open the side-swinging cargo door up it blocks access to the sidewalk, making loading and unloading more difficult if parallel parked, especially if handling a heavy or otherwise awkward item. I can understand Jeep’s desire to stay with convention, being that Jeeps have long fitted their hinges on the right side of the vehicle, but I seriously believe no one would have complained if they’d taken the opportunity of an entirely new model to correct a longstanding mistake. This faux pas makes the Wrangler the only domestic vehicle to inconvenience its owners in this fashion, joining the ranks of Suzuki’s Grand Vitara and Toyota’s RAV4, among others. Ironically, after years of telling me that its RAV4 and Lexus GX 470 fitted their rear door handles on the left side because it’s easier for a driver to get out, walk around and open up the door with their right hand, when Toyota chose to make a North American-only SUV, the FJ Cruiser,
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| ...or when you've got to walk around the dangerous side of the street to load your cargo... (Photo: Trevor Hofmann, American Auto Press) |
Andadding insult to injury is a rear glass half-liftgate that requires the cargo door to be opened in order to operate. This is no doubt the result of the removable roof, but couldn’t there be a better way? I kept on closing the door first, and then trying to lower the window. It wouldn’t work, which caused me to have to open the door back up each time, close the window and then shut the cargo door once again. Ugh! Hey, I’ve got an idea Jeep. Why don’t you redesign the hapless rear window and awkward cargo door while you redo the leaky roof, killing three birds with one proverbial stone?
Now that I’m ranting on doors, I’d also like to mention that the front passenger door almost never closed properly with the first slam. I don’t know why, as there was never anything blocking its path during the great many times it had to be forcefully slammed a second or third time. This was more of an annoyance than a problem, and probably comes down to the fit of anything designed to be removed by its owner. Certainly the rest of the new Wrangler Unlimited’s body panels butted up against each other evenly,
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| But you have to admit, when they've got the roof's seals fixed, the snap-on panels are a great idea. (Photo: Trevor Hofmann, American Auto Press) |
I’m a big fan of this type of vehicle, having been raised on weekend and summer off-road adventures in everything from our old ‘66 Volkswagen Beetle to our mid-‘70s Toyota Land Cruiser (we never had a Jeep but my Dad and I went for a ride in a Willys once). No doubt we wouldn’t have thought twice about being rained on while inside any of these cars, but ironically, as antiquated as they are compared to the new Wrangler, none of them ever did. Sure, we had a ’61 Pontiac Strato Chief wagon that rained upwards through the floorboards, but that was an entirely different problem.
During my most recent weeklong test I didn’t have time to go off-roading, but my Rubicon Trail experience isstill fresh enough in my mind to relate the Wrangler’s capabilities, even in stretched Unlimited guise. It’s good, very good. In fact, I’d go so far to say that, thanks to an extra inch of ground clearance, more power and torque, plus the addition of electronic stability control and ABS, it’s a much better 4x4 than the TJ Unlimited it replaces. Its so much more refined, which may not matter much when you’re the kid riding in back or the young adult jacking up the suspension and stuffing a small-block V8 under the hood, but for young families that might consider this for a regular ride, its quieter and more accommodating cabin, not to mention its more comfortable ride, will go a long way to keeping everyone happy 365 days per year.
It’s actually a vehicle that I’d consider getting full-time, leaks aside. What I like best about it, other that the way it looks and its ability
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| The Wrangler's new cabin is like a Rolls Royce in comparison to previous generations. (Photo: Trevor Hofmann, American Auto Press) |
Integrated into the roll cage, which Jeep refers to as a Sports Bar (where’s the big screen showing non-stop ESPN?), are big stereo speakers that pound out the tunes if the Infinity audio system is traded up for the optional Harmon-Kardon head-unit featuring an integrated 20-gig hard drive, Boston Acoustics speakers, plus all of the other goodies the current system offers such as satellite radio and an input for an auxiliary MP3 player, as well as touch screen functionality that additionally will include a state of the art navigation system. State of the art maybe, but I doubt the nav system will get you out of the woods when you’re bushed. Of course, nothing OEM could do that either, from any manufacturer.
So, by the end of the week I’d given up being frustrated by the passenger-side door never closing properly, had locked my child inside while it was running, and had been leaked on from various spots around the modular roof. You know, that’s more problems than I’ve had with any other vehicle to date, other than maybe a smart fortwo that would only start when
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| New console is better organized and my goodness, it actually has equipment! (Photo: Trevor Hofmann, American Auto Press) |
Leak? What leak. How could I let a little thing like water get in the way of owning one of the coolest vehicles on the road? After all, when you’re out in the woods it’s always good to have a reliable source of fresh running water. Jeep thinks of everything!
Specifications (Wrangler Unlimited Sahara 4x4):
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