I bought this trucklet in '99 to replace a troublesome '94 Grand Cherokee Ltd. V8. Nice truck, but with transmission woes, a slightly binding viscous coupling in the t-case, and a freshy leaking rear main seal, all this at 65K miles, it was time to move on. This, and the thirsty V8, which you'd expect it to be of course, felt like an asthmatic 4-cylinder above 8K feet of elevation, which is where we lived at the time. The t-case coupler alone was a $700 part, and where we lived, not having bona-fide 4WD was not an option in winter. I couldn't figure out how to get the transmission into the trunk of my wife's Intrepid to take it to town and have it rebuilt. I wasn't about to pay to have someone yank it...that's not all that difficult, just greasy and heavy.
The GV has its issues, most of which I've either fixed or learned to live with. The cheesy interior panels which scratch if you look at them wrong I've learned to ignore. The uphoulstery is wearing a bit faster than I'd expect for a car with 76K miles on it, but hey, it's an off-road truck, I don't care what it looks like, I just don't want metal tearing holes in the seats...then my slacks. The shifter doesn't stick in gear when hot, anymore. Nice. Hell, there is less than a quarter inch of fluid used in the clutch master cylinder. In theory, and I've checked this on a few vehicles, the clutch should last pretty much forever given the rate the fluid is falling. It really does work like brakes...when it gets to 'min', start shopping for a clutch.
I put coil spring spacers in the rear to even out the stance after putting KYB's in all the corners. That and BFG AT's in the 225/75/16 size make it a better performer and aid in appearance. The KYB's added just enough 'lift' to require use of camber adjustment bolts to tweak the front-end alignment. I've even managed to get the alignment just right so the dreaded steering shake is gone about 90% of the time and tire wear is almost non-existient.
I keep it because I absolutely must have a vehicle to tow with all wheels on the ground behind our motorhome. We've been travelling for almost three years, and it's been fun...diff replacements notwithstanding. This rules out most cars...at least the ones I'd own. Me driving a Saturn...nope, don't think so. I'd rather my partially-crippled ass walk to wherever I need to go. I'd be late, but I wouldn't be driving a Saturn, either.
I've even gotten good A/C performance out of the system by replacing the OEM condender with an 'old-style' tube-and-fin setup. Rocks got behind the electric fan's 'guard' while behind the motorhome in Alaska, yet could not drop out the holes in the bottom, so the first time I fired it up, the A/C happened to be 'on' (we had come from Vegas...in July), the rocks, being spun by the electric fan blades, flattened the fins in about 3.5 seconds. It was marginal to begin with, as over 103F, or so, had me considering opening the windows, so with flat fins, it was worthless above about 85. No more, though. It's freakin' frigid.
After the first two diff failures, I decided to go with old 5.13 'Kick diffs, as the tires threw the gearing just enough to notice how pokey the machine is in city driving. I did the manual hubs while I was at it...easy enough.
I've now blown up the OEM diff, the used GV replacement, the 5.13 'Kick replacement, and this last 'Kick diff lasted all of 2K driving miles & 6K towing miles. The towing miles don't really count, as there isn't any power being transmitted.
I'm up for suggestions as to why this is torturing me in this way. The OEM diff lasted 52K, not a foot of towing on it, cracked pinion. The replacement used GV diff lasted about 5K miles driving/2K miles towing, another cracked pinion. The first 'Kick diff lasted about 20K miles of driving and a whopping 40K miles of towing...maybe more. The ring gear was torn up, I have pics of it if anyone is curious to see it. This final one sounds like a quarter-sized chunk of metal is periodically getting caught up in the gears (I've heard what a bolt sounds like in a late-60's Dodge van, it's a bad, bad sound)...lasted 2K miles driving, 5K of towing. I'm at 76K and ready to take it to the worst neighborhood I can find and leave the keys in it with it running. I'm concerned a potential thief would take it 100 feet and say, "screw this...I'm not making it around the block in this POS."
Oh, and it's seen Mobil 1 in everything since new. I changed all the fluids in everything oil-related to synth between 1500 and 2K miles. Took until after 30K miles for the oil control rings to seat 100%.
Thanks for letting me vent. I'd do the XL-7 rear axle swap, but I don't have a garage in which to do it, and that's a bit more than I'd like to bite off right now. Ironically, I've been shopping used Grand Scarakees, and one which is identical to the one I traded for the GV, is for sale here in Dallas, where I bought the last one. Even the color is the same. Has all of 54K miles on it.
I'm tempted, even though I know I should know better. At least the Jeep never had me walking, and it never, ever got stuck...even after a four foot snow. The GV, with decent tires, requires a goodly amount of snow to become immobile, but 20 inches can do it. I'm not sure what it was with the Jeep, might just have been luck, though I think the automatic trans helped in this case.
Kelly
'99 JLX+, owned it since mile 40, babied most of its life, and it's given me a bunch of grief