The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

Jeep updates Grand Cherokee

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Jeep has updated its Grand Cherokee large SUV with mildly tweaked styling, small price rises for certain variants and a range reshuffle that involves the removal of the Summit and petrol Overland variants, and the introducti­on of the off-road-focussed Trailhawk.

Expected in Australian showrooms this month, the range kicks off with the two-wheel-drive petrol-powered V6 Laredo from $47,500 before onroad costs, and tops out at $91,000 for the 6.4-litre Hemi V8-powered SRT.

The biggest change is the arrival of the 3.0-litre turbo-diesel Trailhawk that Jeep claims is the most capable Grand Cherokee in the rough stuff.

Priced at $74,000 BOCS, the Trailhawk comes with a uniquely-tuned Quadra-lift air suspension that gives the Trailhawk 260mm of ground clearance, the most of any Grand Cherokee.

It also comes with Jeep’s Quadradriv­e II four-wheel-drive system, four underbody skid plates, front tow hooks, a matte black bonnet decal, grey mirrors and grille, and off-road assistance systems such as selectspee­d control with hill ascent control.

Jeep Australia director Guillaume Drelon said the Trailhawk would fit well with Australian­s who liked to get out and explore.

“The arrival of the new Trailhawk model, with its heightened off-road abilities, is particular­ly exciting for Australia, a nation whose core values resonate strongly with Jeep’s love of freedom and adventure,” he said.

Range-wide visual updates include a redesigned front fascia with tweaked headlight design and LED foglights, a slimmer version of Jeep’s iconic seven-slot grille, a new selection of 18 and 20-inch alloy wheels and six new paint colours – bringing the total colour palette to 11.

All variants bar the SRT get Jeep offroad pages – a feature that brings up the car’s diagnostic­s on the Grand Cherokee’s 8.4-inch touchscree­n.

This includes wheel articulati­on, transmissi­on temperatur­e, suspension, driving modes, and oil, coolant and transmissi­on temperatur­es.

The SRT instead gets Jeep performanc­e pages – a more road-focussed diagnostic system.

Inside, buyers get a new acoustic windscreen and front door glass for improved noise levels, as well as a gear selector that has been redesigned after the old one made news for the wrong reasons last year, when actor Anton Yelchin was killed after he failed to properly engage park in his Grand Cherokee which then rolled down his driveway and pinned him against a security gate.

Updates have also been made to safety features such as lane departure warning and parallel and perpendicu­lar park assist.

Prices have been increased on some variants, rising $500 on petrol-powered Laredo and Limited variants and $1000 for the diesel-only Overland and range-topping SRT. Diesel-powered Laredo and Limited variants remain the same price.

Dropped from the range are the Summit, which sat atop the Grand Cherokee range before the arrival of the SRT, while the petrol V6-powered Overland is also gone.

No changes have been made to the 184kw-570nm 3.0-litre turbo-diesel V6 or the 344kw-624nm 6.4-litre SRT V8, but the 3.6-litre aspirated V6 comes with a tiny 3kw power bump as well as four percent fuel economy improvemen­t, thanks in part to the introducti­on of an idle-stop system.

All variants are still powered by an eight-speed ZF automatic transmissi­on that has been updated for improved shift quality and durability, and now comes with an Eco mode.

The updated range comes with a five-year warranty, lifetime roadside assistance and capped-price servicing.

 ??  ?? BUSH BASHER: Jeep claims its new Trailhawk variant is its most off-road capable Grand Cherokee yet.
BUSH BASHER: Jeep claims its new Trailhawk variant is its most off-road capable Grand Cherokee yet.

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