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MrTruck
review

Most SUV's don't
go off road and aren't even built
to go off-road, but the ones that
can, sure are fun! Lot's of chrome
on this 2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Overland, so it looks good
climbing trails. Rumors are that
Chrysler is planning to stretch
the Grand Cherokee in the future
and I hope they don't. The 04
Dodge Durango grew larger with the
new model, but the Grand Cherokee
is so nimble it would be a shame
to lose a true off-road SUV to a
longer version. Don't do it Dodge!
The Overland
model is the top of the line Grand
Cherokee with a 4.7L V-8 and the
5-speed automatic used with the
Dodge Ram 1500 and above. Leather
and moon roof are standard. The
options were Trailer Tow Group 4
cross-bars on the roof rail, (this
use to be standard, but most SUV
manufactures now charge for it)
block heater, AM/FM DVD, GPS
navigation at $1200, power pedals
and my favorite for only $150 was
the Tire Pressure Monitoring
Display. This option has a sensor
transmitter in the valve stem that
gave a readout on the overhead
console screen on all four tires.
This is great, I could tell what
the air pressure was in each tire.
The pressure would fluctuate 5 psi
from morning till night. I checked
screen display with my pro truck
tire gauge and it was accurate.
This would be nice on a truck and
trailers, knowing when a tire was
low before it got hot enough to
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Grand Cherokee is a
popular towing vehicle.
Equipped properly it can
surprise you. The Power
Tech HO 4.7L V-8 standard
in the Overland is rated
at 260 horsepower and
330-lb.-ft of torque. The
5-speed 545RFE auto has 2
overdrives for increased
gas mileage, but for
towing you need to shut OD
off as it shifts too often
under load. The Overland
4x4 model comes with
Quadra-Drive, combining
Quadra-TracII and Vari-Lok
axles. Very sophisticated
and a climbing animal.
This engine was very fast
by itself, but pulling a 2
horse steel trailer over
long 6% grades took the
acceleration away. 2nd
gear is a dual range but
from 3rd to 4th, (the 1rst
overdrive) was a big gap
for towing power.
Short
hills worked good and
level ground pulling a
trailer is off course
ideal. Having a short
wheelbase as a true SUV
rear coil springs and
being a uni-body like a
car and not a
body-on-frame like a
pickup truck, limits what
size and weight of trailer
you can safely tow. This
Jeep had a 3.73 rear axle
ratio and a maximum towing
capacity of 6500#'s. This
is maximum trailer weight
dead weight like hay or
corn. Live weight as with
a high center of gravity
horse would be safer at a
lower max trailer weight.
The class 4 hitch receiver
that comes with the
trailer tow group, sticks
out better that the older
models. Good for attaching
your draw bar without
using your creeper.
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The first year
with GPS as an option, spoiled me.
I could see a display of my
elevation, longitude, latitude
maps of where I was, wanted to go
or just what's ahead. On the
baseline road south of Akron CO, I
could see it was 40 degrees
parallel just like on the maps at
school. GPS can really be a time
saver showing you the streets that
are coming up just ahead or you
can completely plot your course
and just follow the arrows on the
screen. When you don't follow the
arrows, the computer tries to find
another route to get to your
destination and if you keep
ignoring the arrows, the computer
gives up and tells you to
"turn a u-turn stupid".
Here I am trying to mess with a
talking computer, it had no sense
of humor. The GPS is better than
video games for traveling
entertainment. But you want to get
it adjusted before your trip
because it can be a dangerous
distraction like a teenager
driving and talking on a cell
phone..
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press vehicles get tp go
where I go, which was to
the wheat field at
harvest. I drove the
combine, though 30 years
old along with the truck
at the Vorce farm south of
Otis CO. Good thing farm
equipment can last 3
decades since the crop
prices haven't changed
much in the same amount of
time. The 2004 $41,000 SUV
seemed a little out of
place in the same field.
You know wheat wouldn't
pay for it.
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The EPA mileage
rating on this Grand Cherokee was
15 in the city and 20 mpg on the
highway. My average fuel economy
was a combined 16-18 mpg. Pulling
a trailer brought it down to 15
mpg and I got all the way up to 20
mpg cruising 75+ mph on the
interstate. I liked the rain
sensitive windshield wipers. I
wish the control buttons like
lights, fog lights, cruise control
etc. were lit. It takes more than
a few days for me to remember
where everything's at in the dark.

Unibody with two
boxed full length tubes as
sub-frames, one step above a car sub
frame. This contributes to more
ground noise and vibration but
allows more ground clearance and a
low step-in height. The Grand
Cherokee has a boxed sheet metal
imitation frame welded to the
floor pan. Not as strong a truck
body-on-frame but it allows a
lower center of gravity, good on a
true off-roader. I appreciate not
climbing up to get in. The Grand
Cherokee is very maneuverable
off-road as well in a parking lot.
Add that to the rugged good looks
and you have part of the formula
that makes them so popular.
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receiver, Class IV part of
the Trailer Tow Group is
bolted to the boxed full
length sub-frame.
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Beautiful
Midnight Blue Pearl Coat
and chrome and chrome! The
chrome grille, engine
guard, tow hooks, wheels
and door guards
accentuated the paint for
the classy look. I didn't
want to get it dirty, but
the trails just kept
calling me.
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| Travalong
Bandit 2-horse steel
straight-load is a
versatile trailer. One
wide tailgate with a
movable divider gives even
a nervous horse an easy
target. |
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Nice
looking combination. The
rig does turn tight too.
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Doors
on the nose of the
Travalong access the
saddle racks.
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Maneuverable
fun-mobile
A
special thanks to Parker Trailers
for the Titan
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