4 x 4 Australia

Get ready Aus, the Jeep Gladiator is on its way.

JEEP’S GLADIATOR PICK-UP DOESN’T LAND IN AUSTRALIA UNTIL APRIL/MAY, BUT WE MANAGED TO SNARE ONE FOR A DAY IN THE DUNES OF NEVADA.

- WORDS MATT RAUDONIKIS PHOTOS CRISTIAN BRUNELLI

THE JT GLADIATOR marks Jeep’s return to the pick-up truck market, and the good news is it’s coming to Australia. It should land here sometime around April or May, but we couldn’t wait until then to drive it. When we found out that our mate Bill Barbas from Melbourne Jeep specialist Double Black Offroad was driving a Gladiator Rubicon around Las Vegas while we were there for the SEMA Show, we had to steal the keys for a day.

The JT Gladiator is based on the Jeep Wrangler and from the B-pillars forward it’s pretty much identical. At the back there is a load bed behind the four-door cabin, and the rear of the chassis and the 5-link suspension takes design features from the Ram 1500 truck to make it a better load hauler.

The Gladiator is classed as a midsize pick-up in the USA, so it’s grouped against the likes of the Toyota Tacoma, Ford Ranger and Chevy Colorado, which means many will pit it against the popular Hilux, Ranger and Colorado here; but, in reality, it is a very different vehicle. For a start it rolls on live axles and coil springs both front and rear, while all our popular one-tonne utes have IFS and leaf-sprung live-axle rears. With its live axles and lockers, you can expect the Jeep JT Gladiator to be a better off-road vehicle than any other stock ute sold in Australia.

However, the Jeep can’t match the approximat­e one-tonne payload of our popular utes. In the USA, Jeep claims best-in-class load and towing capacities, but it doesn’t match what we expect here in Australia. In Us-specificat­ion, the Gladiator Rubicon as driven will carry just 526kg and tow 3175kg. That gets worse with the taller 3.73:1 final-drive gearing in the Sport and Overland models, and with the manual transmissi­on. In the US, though, you can option the Rubicon’s 4.1:1 final drive gears into a Gladiator Sport to deliver close to 700kg payload and 3470kg towing.

In Australia, we will get an Internatio­nal version of the Gladiator much like we do with the JL Wrangler, which means we’ll miss out on some of the good gear on the US models. Our Internatio­nal spec JTS will be limited to 2712kg towing and 620kg payload, so it is down on many of its would-be competitor­s.

Another huge point of difference for the Jeep will be its petrolonly power train in a diesel-fuelled ute market. Jeep hasn’t ruled out a diesel in the JT, but at launch it will only be available with the 3.6-litre petrol V6 engine backed by an 8-speed auto. You can pretty much rule out a manual gearbox in Australia, as is the case with the JL Wrangler.

Possible diesel engine options that could be available in the future include the 3.0-litre V6 engine, as found in the Jeep Grand Cherokee and Ram 1500 and which will soon be fitted to the JT in the USA, or the 2.2-litre 4-pot as we get in the JL Rubicon, but Jeep officials have been reluctant to say anything about these possibilit­ies to this point.

A power train option for the future will be EV and hybrid drive with Jeep confirming that all of its models will be electrifie­d by 2022 as it plans to become ‘The greenest SUV brand’ in the world.

THE QUALITY DAMPERS MADE EASY WORK POUNDING OVER DEEP CORRUGATIO­NS, RUTS AND ROCKS IN THE NEVADA DESERT

Considerin­g the powertrain we know we will get in Australia, how does it go? Jump behind the wheel of the Gladiator and you could be in any JL Wrangler; it’s all the same interior layout, switchgear and view over the bonnet. The JT Rubicon we drove was powered by the Pentastar V6 engine and 8-speed auto we’ll be getting here, so all familiar and good there, too. It isn’t until you hit the highway that the longer wheelbase of the JT proves markedly different to the JL.

The Gladiator rides on a 3487mm wheelbase as opposed to the JL Wrangler’s 3008mm, so it’s a bit more stable and surefooted on road than the Wrangler. There’s still the light steering that likes to wander at speed, as we’ve noted in Wranglers, but the bigger ute feels firmer on the road. The Gladiator is also long at 5573mm overall compared to the four-door Wrangler at 4882mm, and you really notice it in suburban carparks and on tight bush tracks.

We thought the long wheelbase would pose a problem for the Gladiator off road, but even though it scraped over the peaks of sand dunes, the sand was soft and the Rubicon’s rock rails took the top off them without getting hung-up.

Jeep claims a 20.3° ramp-over angle for JT Rubicon compared to 21.2° for the internatio­nalspec JL Rubi we get in Australia.

The long wheelbase and overall length didn’t pose as much of a problem as expected on a tight U-turn on the side of a steep hill, either. It was a track made for UTVS and buggies, but the XL Jeep could have made the turn in one bite; we only backed it up to get a straighter drop over a rock step on the descent.

The Us-spec JT Rubicon is equipped with Fox Racing shocks and 33-inch all-terrain tyres; the 33-inch muddies on this car are optional. That doesn’t necessaril­y mean we’ll get these goodies here as we’ve found with the local-spec JL Wrangler which gets smaller rubber, but we’re keeping our fingers crossed that things will be different for the JT.

The quality dampers made easy work pounding over deep corrugatio­ns, ruts and rocks in the Nevada desert, and the Rubicon’s disconnect­ing front sway bar improved the ride and control over rough terrain at lower speeds. Front and rear lockers were also great in the rough stuff, but we found the electronic traction control struggled in some soft sand.

Whatever specificat­ion it takes when the Gladiator gets to Australia next year, a true off-road vehicle will finally materialis­e in the 4x4 ute market. We reckon it will sit somewhere between the common one-tonne 4x4 utes and a Landcruise­r 79 in terms of price, with two variants; an Overland and the Rubicon. Like most Jeeps it will be bought by enthusiast­s who will delve into the ocean of kit available from the factory and aftermarke­t, to build the Gladiator they want and need.

The Gladiator will be worth the wait and we’re looking forward to driving the JT Down Under, to see how it handles local conditions, a load in the tray, and the outback.

WHATEVER SPEC IT TAKES WHEN IT GETS TO AUSTRALIA, A TRUE OFF-ROAD VEHICLE WILL FINALLY MATERIALIS­E IN THE 4X4 UTE MARKET

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1. The Gladiator’s interior is very ... Wrangler.
2. The uber familiar 3.6litre Pentastar V6.
3. Vented hood gives the JT a visual punch.
4. The tray is back! At 1524mm long.
5. The 5573mm-long JT is surprising­ly nimble.
01 1. The Gladiator’s interior is very ... Wrangler. 2. The uber familiar 3.6litre Pentastar V6. 3. Vented hood gives the JT a visual punch. 4. The tray is back! At 1524mm long. 5. The 5573mm-long JT is surprising­ly nimble.
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1. Fox Racing shocks are fitted to Us-spec models.
2. Falken Wildpeaks were aired down for Nevada’s sand dunes.
02 1. Fox Racing shocks are fitted to Us-spec models. 2. Falken Wildpeaks were aired down for Nevada’s sand dunes.
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