The Day

Jeep Grand Cherokee Trailhawk comes with supercharg­ed power

- By Derek Price Cargazing.com

Putting a 707-horsepower engine in a steet-legal car is crazy enough.

Now Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s has gone off-the-charts insane by cramming the supercharg­ed Hellcat V8 under the hood of a Jeep Grand Cherokee, creating one of the strangest and most exciting Frankenste­in SUVs the world has ever seen.

It's called the Trackhawk, and it's hard to believe a vehicle like this even exists.

It does, though, and I just spent a week driving one in its powerful, wonderful, illogical glory.

Track-capable Grand Cherokees are nothing new, as Jeep has been thrilling enthusiast­s with fast, surprising­ly nimble versions under the SRT badge for years, carving out a microscopi­c niche within the already tiny world of high-performanc­e SUVs. But the 707-horsepower Trackhawk takes things to a completely different level, starting by making its mind-blowing power actually usable.

I've driven the Hellcat-powered Charger sedan and Challenger coupe from Dodge, and they're basically 707-horsepower monuments to tire smoke. That's fun, sure, but it takes a skillful touch—something I don't have—to get all that power to the pavement without vaporizing the back tires on

those rear-wheel-drive monsters. It's difficult to get full use out of all the power, ample as it may be.

The Trackhawk, on the other hand, makes it easy.

Stomp on the gas pedal, and the all-wheel-drive system spreads the astronomic­al torque between four tires, helping it comfortabl­y stick to the road with nary a tire chirp while it rockets forward with unimaginab­le force. It goes from 0-60 mph in a supercar-like 3.5 seconds, Jeep claims, all while blasting a throaty death shriek from under the hood that makes you want to summon an exorcist.

Seriously, hearing a Hellcat V8 at full throttle is a spiritual experience. Like a Ferrari V12, it's an unforgetta­ble sound that leaves a mark on your heart for life.

Assuming you keep a delicate touch on the throttle, the Grand Cherokee Trackhawk is impressive­ly easy to drive around town. It's quiet, spacious and smooth riding, with a reasonably demure personalit­y that helped me pick up kids from school and get groceries without drawing much attention to the wild, rare and ridiculous­ly overpowere­d vehicle I was driving.

Enthusiast­s, though, will notice the styling and functional changes that set the Trackhawk apart. "Supercharg­ed" badges on the side and a sculpted hood with two heat extractors make it clear that this Grand Cherokee is very different from the rest, all without resorting to juvenile wings and garish paint schemes.

It's classy — at least as classy as a pricey, overpowere­d, track-day toy SUV can be.

It should go without saying that buying a vehicle like this makes little logical sense. Its fuel economy ratings (11 city, 17 highway, 13 combined) and price tag ($85,900 to start, or a hair under $100,000 with options on my tester) make it something that attracts only the most wildly enthusiast­ic buyers, not your average mom or pop who walk into a Jeep dealer.It's also so fast, with a top speed of 180 mph, that the limits of its performanc­e can't even remotely be explored safely on public roads.

Fortunatel­y for those adrenaline junkies who want a lightning-quick, 707-horse vehicle that can go straight from the racetrack to the trails, Jeep was crazy enough to make this thing. Thank goodness.

 ??  ?? Jeep claims its new Grand Cherokee Trackhawk is the fastest SUV in the world, accelerati­ng from 0-60 mph in 3.5 seconds en route to a top speed of 180.
Jeep claims its new Grand Cherokee Trackhawk is the fastest SUV in the world, accelerati­ng from 0-60 mph in 3.5 seconds en route to a top speed of 180.
 ??  ?? On the inside, the Trackhawk is impressive­ly spacious and luxurious, as it should be with a starting price of $85,900.
On the inside, the Trackhawk is impressive­ly spacious and luxurious, as it should be with a starting price of $85,900.

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