check out the new remote control Jockey Wheel SmartBar Topargee products Enginesaver Low Water Alarms Red Earth Festival Hammervan Park Booker
Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Jeep recall


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 8773
Date:
Jeep recall


https://mr4x4.com.au/jeep-grand-cherokee-recall-fire-risk/



__________________

Possum; AKA:- Ali El-Aziz Mohamed Gundawiathan

Sent from my imperial66 typewriter using carrier pigeon, message sticks and smoke signals.



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9575
Date:

Gday...

The recall - https://www.productsafety.gov.au/recall/fca-australia-pty-ltd-2016-wk-jeep-grand-cherokee

Cheers - John



__________________

2006 Discovery 3 TDV6 SE Auto - 2008 23ft Golden Eagle Hunter
Some people feel the rain - the others just get wet - Bob Dylan



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 2608
Date:

Whenever I see a Jeep nowdays I keep well clear of them - just in case the wheels fall off, the motor blows up or in this case, it catches fire...........lol

__________________

Cheers Bruce

 

The amazing things you see when nomading Australia



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1840
Date:

 This is a shot of the last decent vehicle that Jeep built. laughing.gif  laughing.gif

MASH4077thJeep.jpg

 



Attachments
__________________

Cheers Keith & Judy

Don't take life too seriously, it never ends well.

Trip Reports posted on feathersandphotos.com.au Go to Forums then Trip Reports.

 



Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 431
Date:

Santa will be further delayed due to the fact he bought a jeep.

__________________

Our Rig

VAN December 2019 Goldstar 21ft

TUG 2017 Ford Ranger Wildtrak

Life Was Ment To Be Easy If You Have The Ability To Adapt 

 



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 3066
Date:

Joking aside.
Over the yrs, they really have proven themselves. As a brand.... (A few are lucky?)
as about the biggest piece of rubbish on the roads.
Look nice enuff. But don't touch.

I remember a few yrs ago.
Mate owned a second hand car yard.
He was telling me the one car none ever took in (Unless it was nearly free)
was a Jeep of any model.
90% of the time, you were stuck with them till a mug came along.

My brother bought a new soft top version in Canada a few yrs ago.
5 yrs later, he sold for $3.750....
That was best price he could get. Eventually.
and it'd only run him to work and back in the city.Hard and soft top included.

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1840
Date:

JEEP takes the cake for the most recalls. laughing.giflaughing.gif

8132628313_fbe8468ab0_b.jpg

 

 



Attachments
__________________

Cheers Keith & Judy

Don't take life too seriously, it never ends well.

Trip Reports posted on feathersandphotos.com.au Go to Forums then Trip Reports.

 



Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 243
Date:

Having owned one of these pieces of rubbish I agree also their dealerships leave a lot to be desired service is none existant especially out west the trick is to find a dealer

__________________


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 142
Date:

Aside from the fact that it is for a limited number of petrol engined models, who here can be honest enough to claim that their chosen tow vehicle has had no recalls in either its life or that of its predecessors?


__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1571
Date:

Interesting article

http://www.news.com.au/finance/business/manufacturing/why-there-is-a-record-number-of-car-safety-recalls-25-million-and-counting/news-story/78d643cd42b7e3cbf7c4ac020429f555



__________________

Bryan



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 3066
Date:

Without tapping on it.
That looks suspiciously like Toyota..???

My GU cost me $460ish for a Key ring Sensor, and a fan belt tensioner
in it's life with me.
Towing a 6.5 mtr offroader.

Prev '91 GQ cost nothing but lotsa petrol with a trailer on back
Great truck, even with Petrol donk.

If this Isuzu is half as good as either.
I'll be more than wrapped with it.

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1571
Date:

macka17 wrote:

Without tapping on it.
That looks suspiciously like Toyota..???

My GU cost me $460ish for a Key ring Sensor, and a fan belt tensioner
in it's life with me.
Towing a 6.5 mtr offroader.

Prev '91 GQ cost nothing but lotsa petrol with a trailer on back
Great truck, even with Petrol donk.

If this Isuzu is half as good as either.
I'll be more than wrapped with it.


 Macka its a list of recalls so far for 2016. Makes some very interesting reading. 



__________________

Bryan



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 5388
Date:

mjt57 wrote:

Aside from the fact that it is for a limited number of petrol engined models, who here can be honest enough to claim that their chosen tow vehicle has had no recalls in either its life or that of its predecessors?


Tongue in cheek, so as not to start any flaming wars, but factual information

I shall put my hand up for this one

1969 Austin 1800 Mk II, towing a 12 foot (cub type) expandable ends caravan

1994 Ford Falcon EB (6 cylinder), towing a Viscount 17 foot caravan

If there had been any recalls, then no one had told me



__________________

Tony

It cost nothing to be polite



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 3066
Date:

Yes Tony.

BUT.
THEY are cars when cars WERE cars.
Mechanical...

Not all this electronic crap to make them both, more complex and more expensive.
to run and repair.

What I wouldn't give for a new GQ 4 ltr with Turbo.
or one of my early Squareline Fairlanes with 351 Windsor in there.

They'd tow anything anywhere and fully clockwork.
Run forever.

Best mechanical car I ever had for touring.
was my Audi 100 back in '71 in Sth Africaaa.

THAT. Was a SWEEEET car.

Nowadays. Coming out of VW FActory.
I wouldn't own one a day past it's warranty time out thank you.

Cars have gone backwards not forward.
They need to STOP.

Till electronic reliability with ALL of them catches up.
Mechanicals are basically fine.

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 906
Date:

Oh for the good old days when cars were really cars
The head had to be removed regularly given a decarb and valve grind
Tappets needed constant adjustment.
Points in the distributor needed regular adjustment or replacing.
Oil needed constant topping up
Oil needed changing every 1000 miles instead of every 10,000 miles.
25 to 30 miles to the gallon of petrol instead of 40 to 50 miles to a gallon diesel.
Overheating when the weather was hot whenever you encountered a long hill
Then remember the 2 speed automatic.
The car that would often fail to start on a freezing cold morning if you didn't get the choke setting just right and if you got that wrong, you ended with a flooded engine which you of course kept trying to start until the battery was flat
Oh and if you happen to drop the clutch there was a fair chance of ending up with a broken back axle.
Of course with the drivers seat position one size fits all.
No heating in winter or cooling in summer.
Brakes that might just stop you in an emergency
Lights that barely lit up the road.
Windscreens when hit with rock became opaque
Cars with the cornering ability of a billy cart.
Arrrhh the good old days, they don't make cars like that anymore.
Cheers
David


__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1378
Date:

 Yeah good post Dutchy the modern car ,like modern medicine makes our lives so much better ,in the good old days it was easier to fix your own vehicles and you needed too,who here would like to swap there modern tug for an eh Holden a gem of a car in its day But things have moved on for the better...



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1571
Date:

Roving-Dutchy wrote:

Oh for the good old days when cars were really cars
The head had to be removed regularly given a decarb and valve grind
Tappets needed constant adjustment.
Points in the distributor needed regular adjustment or replacing.
Oil needed constant topping up
Oil needed changing every 1000 miles instead of every 10,000 miles.
25 to 30 miles to the gallon of petrol instead of 40 to 50 miles to a gallon diesel.
Overheating when the weather was hot whenever you encountered a long hill
Then remember the 2 speed automatic.
The car that would often fail to start on a freezing cold morning if you didn't get the choke setting just right and if you got that wrong, you ended with a flooded engine which you of course kept trying to start until the battery was flat
Oh and if you happen to drop the clutch there was a fair chance of ending up with a broken back axle.
Of course with the drivers seat position one size fits all.
No heating in winter or cooling in summer.
Brakes that might just stop you in an emergency
Lights that barely lit up the road.
Windscreens when hit with rock became opaque
Cars with the cornering ability of a billy cart.
Arrrhh the good old days, they don't make cars like that anymore.
Cheers
David


 biggrinbiggrinbiggrin So true



-- Edited by Bryan on Sunday 11th of December 2016 09:57:39 PM

__________________

Bryan

Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us
Purchase Grey Nomad bumper stickers Read our daily column, the Nomad News The Grey Nomad's Guidebook