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Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT-8

Friday November 17

(First written on 2006-11-17)
Fed up with getting sand kicked In Its Face, The Jeep Grand Cherokee hits back with the mighty 6.1 Litre SRT-8. Andy Enright reports

Those with longer memories may well remember a time when a Jeep Grand Cherokee was one of the big hitters in the luxury 4x4 class. Admittedly this was a time when the luxury 4x4 class consisted of the Jeep and the Range Rover, but thats not important right now. The Grand Cherokee was something special, a mould breaker. Since then, a whole host of new entrants have queued up to work the big-hearted Jeep over but with the mighty 6.

1-litre SRT-8 model, payback time may have arrived.

Build
Comfort
Depreciation
Economy
Equipment
Handling
Insurance
Performance
Styling
Value
Lets have a brief recap. When the Grand Cherokee debuted in late 1995, many UK journalists were a little puzzled. The 4x4 market was just fragmenting with the introduction of cars like the Toyota RAV4 and many tried comparing the Jeep to far more agricultural fare such as the Land Rover Discovery, the Isuzu Trooper and the Mercedes G-Wagen. With an on-road ride that was unheralded at the time, the Jeep could really only be compared with the Range Rover, and in making a big 4x4 with a tarmac bias although a company with an off-road heritage like Jeep would never admit it the American manufacturer had started something.

For a couple of years, the Grand Cherokee was the hot ticket with soaring residual values and a sky high image. Then cars like the Mercedes M-Class, BMW X5 and Lexus RX300 arrived and the Jeep found itself battling among the relegation places.

"Show this Jeep a wet grassy slope and itll likely be spinning its wheels impotently. Itll sound great doing it though"

The latest version of the Grand Cherokee, introduced in 2005, sees something of a return to form, but its never going to be enough to challenge the very top end Mercedes MLs, Range Rover Sports, Porsche Cayennes and Volkswagen Touaregs. Instead, Jeep must set its sights a little lower and concentrate on putting a good working over on cars like the Land Rover Discovery, Toyota Land Cruiser and upscale BMW X3s. Its still a tough task, but the Jeep has a couple of secret weapons up its sleeve. The first is the best diesel engine in the class in the shape of the 218bhp 3.

0-litre Mercedes derived common rail unit seen in the Grand Cherokee CRD. The other is the engine we look at here, the 420bhp Street Race Technology (SRT)-fettled eight cylinder behemoth costing £41,190. No doubt there are some die-hards who will find the idea of a Jeep with twenty-inch alloy wheels, performance tyres, a low front spoiler and ninety per cent of its drive directed to the rear wheels more than slightly sacrilegious. Show this Jeep a wet grassy slope and itll likely be spinning its wheels impotently.

Console yourself with the fact that itll sound great doing it though. You wont mistake this model for any other in the Jeep line up. In fact, its probably the meanest looking 4x4 money will buy. The centre-mounted dual exhausts would look more at home sprouting out of a Lamborghini Murcielago and the sound the Jeep makes when at tickover is not dissimilar a truculent, bass tone that will frighten small children.

Pop the bonnet and youll see the same 6.1-litre Hemi engine thats shoehorned into the Chrysler 300C SRT-8 and also its US cousins, the Charger and the Magnum. In the Grand Cherokee, peak power arrives at 6,000rpm and the 420lb/ft of torque presents itself for inspection at 4,800rpm. Thats comfortably more than a BMW M5, in case you were wondering.

Drive is directed largely to the rear pair of Goodyear Eagle 285/40s via a five-speed automatic gearbox. Torque to the front wheels varies between ten and one hundred per cent, depending on grip levels, but in normal driving situations fully nine-tenths of that power goes aft. Somewhat refreshingly, Jeep have ditched any pretence of off-road ability and have even dispensed with the low Range gearbox seen on other Grand Cherokee variants. The reason why the SRT-8 isnt fully rear-drive is that the company wanted to maintain an element of all weather performance.

So, weve talked about this engine enough. Whatll it do? This is where it gets fun. Dial in a bunch of revs and sidestep the footbrake and you could well replicate Jeeps figure of 5.2 seconds to 60mph with the good ol quarter mile being dispatched in 13.

5 seconds. Drive like this and youll see single figure fuel economy returns but a more measured right boot will acheive around 15mpg. All that go is no good without an element of control and Jeep have worked hard to keep this 2,180kg monster manageable. The uprated four-piston Brembo brakes grip massive 360mm front discs and guarantee some serious retardation power with a stop from 60mph possible in just 36.

6 metres. Likewise, theres been a lot of work done on the handling package. Bilstein shock absorbers and an industrial-grade strut brace under the bonnet team up with stabiliser bars for the independent front and live-axle rear suspension. Jeep have engineered a rather firm ride into the vehicle and have also fitted deep bucket seats so that front occupants arent launched sideways by the g-forces this model can generate.

Slalom performance is said to be the equal of a Porsche Cayenne Turbo with superior acceleration to the German car when the road opens up. Respect is most certainly due to the Grand Cherokee SRT-8. The biggest hitter on the 4x4 block, its not difficult to imagine that this vehicle will have a significant halo effect for lesser Grand Cherokee models. Its niche may be small, but the SRT-8 has managed to put a sound spanking on a bunch of far pricier pretenders.

Facts At A Glance
CAR: Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT-8
PRICE: £41,190 - on the road
INSURANCE GROUP: 20
CO2 EMISSIONS: 388g/km
PERFORMANCE: 0-60mph 5.0s / Max Speed 152mph
FUEL CONSUMPTION: [urban] 12.8mpg / [extra urban] 21.6mpg / [combined] 17.2mpg
STANDARD SAFETY FEATURES: Twin front and side airbags / ABS / ESP/ tyre pressure monitoring, electronic rollover mitigation system
WILL IT FIT IN YOUR GARAGE?: Length/Width/Heightmm 4755/2251/1694

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