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Chrysler To Recall 1,371 Grand Cherokee and Commander Cars in China

Thursday, January 10th, 2008

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Chrysler LLC has filed a report to China’s quality regulator to recall 1,371 units of its Grand Cherokee and Commander cars in the mainland due to defects in its brakes.

According to a statement on the website of a quality inspection sub-agency under the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine, the recall of the cars is due to defects in the software controlling its braking system and flawed braking parts.
The cars were built between January 2005 and July 2007.

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Categories: Jeep, DaimlerChrysler, Vehicle Recall News


Poor Glass in the Jeep Cherokee

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

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Diamler Chrysler Corporation has announced they will be recalling certain models of the 1998 Jeep Grand Cherokee. They stated that on certain replacement back glass with DOT -403, P/NOS. DB10077YPY, and DB10545GTY, sold for use on Dodge pickup trucks. The back glass may not break into small pieces as required for tempered glass and fails to conform to federal motor vehicle safety standard NO. 205, glazing materials.

In the event of a vehicle crash, the occupants may be seriously injured by shattered glass. Safelite will notify owners and replace the glass free of charge. The recall is expected to begin during January 2008. Owners can contact Safelite toll free at 1-888-843-2906.

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Categories: Jeep, DaimlerChrysler, Vehicle Recall News


Brake Defects Force Chrysler to Issue Recall

Friday, September 21st, 2007

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Chrysler LLC recalled 28,755 Jeep Commander and Grand Cherokee sport-utility vehicles to replace front-brake parts that could fail because they may be made of the wrong type of metal, Bloomberg News reported today.
The recall affects 2007 and 2008 models, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said on its Web site. Some brake calipers may have been made with gray iron instead of ductile iron and could fracture, increasing stopping distance and possibly causing an accident, the Washington-based agency said.
Chrysler hasn’t gotten any reports of accidents or injuries related to the problem, a spokesman told Bloomberg. The recall covers vehicles built from May 17 to July 13.

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Categories: Jeep, Chrysler


The Case Of The Stalling Wranglers

Tuesday, August 28th, 2007

by Damon Lavrinc
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While the recent success of the Wrangler Unlimited bodes well for Jeep and its continued domination of all things off-road, NHTSA is in the midst of investigating a series of complaints claiming that the iconic Jeep is stalling at highway speeds, and in some cases, losing electrical power.

All Wrangler models are under the agency’s watchful eye, both the two- and four-door models, regardless if they’re equipped with four-wheel drive or the standard two-wheel drive. NHTSA says that only 53 complaints have been filed, with 12 reporting a loss of lighting and electrical power.

NHTSA’s investigation will include approximately 35,000 vehicles total, and at this point, no crashes or fatalities have been attributed to the issue.

[Source: Wall Street Journal]

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Categories: Jeep Wrangler, Jeep, Vehicle Recall News


Aussie police get Jeep Wrangler CRD

Friday, August 3rd, 2007

by Alex Nunez
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In Australia, the Victoria Police have acquired a Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sport powered by the available 2.8L CRD. The off-roader is essentially a special-use vehicle that will be used around Melbourne and other venues to help promote a snow safety campaign during the ski season. (Remember folks, it’s winter down there now.) Now, after a long day of promoting snow safety to the masses, we wonder if the fuzz can suppress the urge to use the Jeep for some winter-weather hooning when no one’s looking. You know, as research on what not to do.

[Source: Jeep Australia]

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Categories: Jeep


Jeep

Thursday, May 24th, 2007

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Jeep is an automobile marque (and registered trademark) of DaimlerChrysler. The marque, like all other Chrysler subsidiaries, became part of DaimlerChrysler when Daimler-Benz merged with the Chrysler Corporation in 1998.
Roads that are only suitable for off-road vehicles are often called jeep trails. The most famous is the Rubicon Trail located near Lake Tahoe in central California.

The origin of the term “jeep”
There are many stories about where the word “jeep” came from, how it was coined. These, although they make for interesting and memorable stories, are not quite accurate.
Probably the most popular notion has it that the vehicle bore the designation “GP” (for “General Purpose”), which was phonetically slurred into the word jeep. R. Lee Ermey, on his television series Mail Call, disputes this, saying that the vehicle was designed for specific duties, was never referred to as “General Purpose,” and that the name may have been derived from Ford’s nomenclature referring to the vehicle as GP (G for government-use, and P to designate its 80-inch-wheelbase). “General purpose” does appear in connection with the vehicle in the WW2 TM 9-803 manual, which describes the vehicle as “… a general purpose, personnel, or cargo carrier especially adaptable for reconnaissance or command, and designated as ¼-ton 4×4 Truck”, and the vehicle is designated a “GP” in TM 9-2800, Standard Military Motor Vehicles, 1 September 1943, but whether the average jeep-driving GI would have been familiar with either of these manuals is open to debate.
This version of the story may be complicated by the name of another series of vehicles with the GP designation. The Electro-Motive Division of General Motors, a maker of railroad locomotives, introduced its “General Purpose” line in 1949, using the GP tag. These locomotives are commonly referred to as Geeps, pronounced the same way as “Jeep”.
Many, including Ermey, claim that the likelier origin refers to the character Eugene the Jeep in the Thimble Theater (Popeye) comic strip. Eugene the Jeep was dog-like and could walk through walls and ceilings, climb trees, fly, and just about go anywhere it wanted; it is thought that soldiers at the time were so impressed with the new vehicle’s versatility that they informally named it after the character. The character “Eugene the Jeep” was created in 1936.
The term “jeep” was first commonly used during World War I (1914-1918) by soldiers as a slang word for new recruits and for new unproven vehicles. This is according to a history of the vehicle for an issue of the U.S. Army magazine, Quartermaster Review, which was written by Maj. E. P. Hogan. He went on to say that the slang word “jeep” had these definitions as late as the start of World War II.
“Jeep” had been used as the name of a small tractor made by Modine.
The term “jeep” would eventually be used as slang to refer to an airplane, a tractor used for hauling heavy equipment, and an autogyro. When the first models of the jeep came to Camp Holabird for tests, the vehicle did not have a name yet. Therefore the soldiers on the test project called it a jeep. Civilian engineers and test drivers who were at the camp during this time were not aware of the military slang term. They most likely were familiar with the character Eugene the Jeep and thought that Eugene was the origin of the name. The vehicle had many other nicknames at this time such as Peep and Pygmy and Blitz-Buggy, although because of the Eugene association, Jeep stuck in people’s minds better than any other term.
Words of the Fighting Forces by Clinton A. Sanders, a dictionary of military slang, published in 1942, in the library at The Pentagon gives this definition:-
Jeep: A four-wheel drive car of one-half to one-and-one-half ton capacity for reconnaissance or other army duty. A term applied to the bantam-cars, and occasionally to other motor vehicles (U.S.A.) in the Air Corps, the Link Trainer; in the armored forces, the ½ ton command car. Also referred to as “any small plane, helicopter, or gadget.”
Early in 1941, Willys-Overland demonstrated the vehicle’s ability by having it drive up the U.S. Capitol steps, driven by Willy’s test driver Irving “Red” Haussman, who had recently heard soldiers at Fort Holabird calling it a “jeep”. When asked by syndicated columnist Katherine Hillyer for the Washington Daily News (or by a bystander, according to another account) what it was called, Irving answered “It’s a jeep.”
Katherine Hillyer’s article was published on 20 February 1941 around the nation and included a picture of the vehicle with the caption:-
LAWMAKERS TAKE A RIDE- With Senator Meade, of New York, at the wheel, and Representative Thomas, of New Jersey, sitting beside him, one of the Army’s new scout cars, known as “jeeps” or “quads,” climbs up the Capitol steps in a demonstration yesterday. Soldiers in the rear seat for gunners were unperturbed.
This exposure caused all other jeep references to fade, leaving the 4×4 truck with the name.
Willys-Overland Inc. was later awarded the sole privilege of owning the name “Jeep” as registered trademark, by extension, merely because it originally had offered the most powerful engine.
(Compare “mayhem” and “commando” for words which changed their main meanings because of newspaper misunderstandings.)

Source: Wikipedia

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Categories: Jeep



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