+Hao Liu on impact 2 M16s pop up from under the hood and just start spraying the moose in lead while the American flag comes out the roof and the national anthem plays from the radio..
We swear, we took weight out and put it under specs this time, along with putting it up to the right tire pressure... Unlike the first test where we got caught overloaded the jeep by 300 lbs and having the tired under by 5 psi......
Did you know a cow will take off if facing forward at about ~1000km/h? Cows apparently have a slight aerodynamic lift in the forward position. I just read some students research paper about it. Lol
I drive It for two years .. it s fantastic , electronic is superb , never drive a suv like this ... The electronics make is so quick and stable .. you don't fell the wheight
really a helmet is more dangerous in the event of a crash. the added weight on your neck could lead to fatal injuries. also the airbag systems arent built do deal with helmets. anyway.... wearing a helmet without a bucket seat is more dangerous than wearing no helmet.
I see the cars driven the same way. The in car of the Jeep did not look overly aggressive. It is suppose to mimic avoiding a moose. Only difference is that the other cars suspension, electronic and tire package do a MUCH better job of responding to the inputs to make a safe lane change instead of bouncing and lifting the wheels.
It's not really a moose and not a lane change. It simulates a suddenly appearing obstacle on a 2 lane country road. Driver swerves through opposite lane to avoid collision and must not collide with anything off road (the outer cones).
Obedient Octopus yes nothing happen to me. It was a miracle? The insure guy toll me in his experience this kind of accidents the result its death of the passanger.
As an engineer watching this, I hope Jeep has taken the issue seriously. I don't know if it would be worth testing a newer model. The roll issue didn't surprise me so much. I've driven them, and they are a very soft, pillowy riding vehicle. This is an excellent recipe for body roll and especially body inertia. What was more interesting to me was the tire. This is a more dangerous issue than the roll in my eyes because it directly affects stability of the car. It shouldn't happen under normally achievable driving inputs on a very stable surface. To think I can turn the wheel hard and pop a tire is scary. It should not be possible. To Jeep's defense, development will only contain what they have traditionally used for testing and what the government requires for testing. Older Jeeps weren't stable either, but no one complained. It was just expected back at that time. Manufacturers got better. Jeep did too, just not far enough. As they further develop their testing programs and fundamental design goals, they do need to incorporate new testing methods. There is a good side to this. Jeep is now incorporating Fiat's testing procedures into their Jeep development. The first to see this was the new Cherokee. This testing does include lateral load testing which was something Jeep hadn't previously tested. This was something Jeep presented in another video you can find here on TH-cam regarding the Cherokee testing. I'm hoping this is part of the next generate grand cherokee too and helps develop a much better vehicle. At the moment, it might be beneficial to test the new Cherokee and see if that car handles the moose test well. The new Renegade would also be a good test. Both will show a modern representation of Jeep. I say modern because the Grand Cherokee has been on the same generation since 2011.
In an average crash trucks will give better protection than any car. Don't know why the vid advises ppl not to use Jeeps. They are far better at protecting ppl than any tin car sports that passes this test. Good test though, it is not representative though. That's why it is not in NCAP. It like playing a piano with a hammer, just good fun! Ha ha ha
Well, their merge with fiat and Italian taste with European market is the best thing that could happen to them IMO. Fiat introduced the criteria that the previous platforms were lacking, safety, slick driving experience and more sophisticated exteriors, but kept what American cars are known for: unbeatable comfort and “cushy” rides. I must give it to American cars, they’re comfy. It’s coming from the fact that roads and streets in North America are made completely different, with long straight highways and wide streets. It just works. And it’s coming from me, an European engineer who lives in Canada and drives a brand new ram 1500 Laramie. I’ve “dated” both continents and I know that America and Europa are two different girls.
I did this test when I was in the police academy. It was called Collision Avoidance and we did it in a Ford Taurus at the same speed. Man... the test gave me nightmares because I thought it was difficult and here we have these guys smoothly doing it in SUVs
Veroxzes it's so the English talking people understand, the j is pronounced in a different way in English, the closest letter to j in pronounce is y. Sorry for my English
Jeep's suspension seems too soft and it starts wobbling during sharp turns. The tilt is too much and it cases the car to almost flip over and/or jump after the exit. The suspension needs to be a bit stiffer and i think the wheels need to have a small angle under which the touch the ground.
Yeah. its like they choose the suspension for its off road capabilities rather than what most Cherokee's are used for. On road driving. Its got way more give then is needed to the point that its dangerous. Im not to sure of its anti roll safety equipment but it seems to be rather lacking, it looks more setup to 'flex' and 'crawl' offroad like its brothers the wrangler etc.
MrSterling314 Actually the suspension is adjustable, just turn the dial and lower it and problem is solved. It is not the trucks fault if you don't use the suspension setting properly. It was lowered for the 2014 test and no problems.
MrSterling314 Eactly - don't compare an off road capable vehicle like the Grand Cherokee to a Volvo wagon that can't go anywhere off road and then say Jeep is bad. Try this test with a loaded Landrover Discover, or a Mercedes G500 and see if THEY roll over as much as the jeep. th-cam.com/video/ltH7vhFbZwA/w-d-xo.html
My grand handled great when I had to swerve to keep from hitting a pickup truck with a trailer on the interstate coming home from work. I was doing 70 mph, and he was doing 40mph with no tail lights at night. The speed limit was 70
I tried this with my 15 jeep GC limited 3.6 with fortera tires at 36psi. 1 passenger. My results were definitely better. No blown tires but i did experience wheel/tire lift during the apex of the right turn. not off the ground but slight loss of traction. Test was done in Auto terrain mode. 30 35 40mph. Not sure if jeep fixed the issue. But i was able to complete the moose test successfully.
@@rforracing damn bro, but isn’t it weird you checking a 1 year old comment? Looks like you put a lot more love and trust onto youtube comments than I do 😒
***** consumers don't make that distinction, even if it was true. It's like saying it's fine if your sports car overheats in the city; it's not designed for that environment. That kind of thinking was around 30 years ago but we've moved on...
***** No, they should have got it right first time, as they did a few years later... th-cam.com/video/8Fs5M8GuvcUA/w-d-xo.htmldequate body control and braking control.
Not Zachary, the swedes need to not deflate the tires and add extra weight to the jeep. They shouldnt mess with the factory settings on any vehicle just to make the company look bad.
i agree with the american part of the group (chrysler) but you can't say the same For Alfa Giulia or Alfa Stelvio for example on the italian part, that are today in some points better than German cars.
Cristian Lara yes it is. have you ever read the instruction manual of a crash helmet? in the event of an accident the extra weight of the crash helmet would instantly break your spinal cord.
*Big props to you guys. Show some balls. I thought you were annoying me with the same shot of a popping tire over and over but these were all different ones. I am gob smacked.*
Moose, deer, whatever it is, I've seen drivers loose control over a damn racoon trying to avoid it. Thing is, no matter what you drive, odds are your going to merge to your left and ram a car/truck/semi or merge to your right and end up in the ditch/median wall or dead. Your chances are better to grab the steering wheel tight and ram the son of bitch and it might save your life. Planning and split second reactions don't always go together. Let the vehicle insurance take care of it.. This video doesn't change my opinion in any way. Just interesting to watch
I agree. Anyone trying a high speed 'maneuver' that is not a professional driver will most likely hurt themselves and everyone involved. Don't try this unless you already know you can (from practice). And on wet, snow, or ice, never try it. Hit the brakes, you will reduce speed more drastically instead of sliding off road or into something else or even over a freaking cliff on a mountain road. The one thing to take notice is of is HOW to get out of a possible roll-over situation. If the driver did not corrective steer, the truck would have flipped for sure. Many of them would have.
You are right. Brake or ram directly can be a better choice than try to avoid. But the point of the test is to evaluate the vehicle behaviour in the case the driver has to avoid a collission. The scandinavian invented this and they chose the name "moose test" because if you just ram a big tall animal it´s legs get hit the bumper and then the heavy body crashes to the windshield potentially killing the driver/passenger.
LOL. Yes, a moose test, describing the animal. Wonderful. 'But', there is something to consider here - for this test, all the vehicles are loaded to their maximum capacity. Anymore weight, and things could start breaking. When you see others doing this test, they do not do this. Lets see the test of a single driver (most common), and one fully loaded. I bet your most obvious and pointless statement they all pass the first test. Maybe you don't understand it yet - i am helping my sarcastic tone 'drives' it in - adding maximum weight to vehicles alters the dynamics of all systems - they are calibrated for the most common situations. An simple example is if vehicles where designed to be driven under full weight 100% of the time, the brakes would be double the size, larger tires, more heavy duty suspensions, and larger drive train components. We all know driving at maximum capacity make the vehicle stop longer. Fusterating having to explain this. Just think about it. Everything changes at maximum capacity.
I have the 2012 Grand Cherokee 5.7 4x4 and it takes corners nicely. I've put a few thousand miles on it empty and towing and it feels pretty safe to me. Engine is massive amounts of power and trans works just fine with 8000 pounds towed behind.
It handles pretty good,lacks abs and esp systems tho,but if you are buying an xj you kinda dont care about those systems. And the inline six,well it the 4.0 can beat the plastic vw tdi and plastic volvo engines anyday in reliability
They do the moose test with every car they test. The only cars wich have had this dangerous behaviour is this and the first generation mercedes a class
The Range Rover can probably do much worse without such issues, they have great engineering behind them. Sure they aren’t as reliable but they do the job well. It’s like the bentayga and most German SUV’s they drive very well, more likes cars so there is very little compromise
First of all, let us all accept that Jeep should do something. 20+ years ago an SUV would've been expected to perform like this but today with technology and computers there should be plenty of data and engineering capabilities to make this safer. That said, this is a bullshit test. The Jeep platform is not the same as the other two vehicles. The Jeep has a higher stance and higher center of gravity considering the base frame and drivetrain more closely resembles a truck then a car. The other two vehicles are cars pretending to be SUV's, I wouldn't even call them crossovers. They are essentially sedan's updated to be station wagons. Thus they still drive like a car. Would I expect an Expedition or Escalade to perform like those cars? Not even close, that said I certainly would hope ALL SUV's would be aware of this and adjust accordingly however if you don't like the way a truck or "jeep" handles then don't buy one. They ARE NOT the same as buying a car pretending to be an SUV. Let's not compare apples to oranges, and expect the same performance.
phuc ewe it’s a stereotype it’s mostly not true yes there are fat people like any other place on earth it just not in America you guys take stereotypes way to seriously
I owned a Jeep Grand Cherokee once. After 3 years, I was done with the POS. Plastic all over, poor handling and loud. But it never once got stuck in deep snow.
I don't see what these test could prove, vehicles have different steering ratios and steering control systems. A benefit in one area will likely come with costs in another. you can see that the Volvo didn't react nearly as fast, that's not really a good thing.
Volvo all the way, Did you see how well it handled that test! I've got the V70 3.2L Cross Country. American cars are awful. Rented a few in the states (suv) and the wobble like crazy.
William Brewer I’ve driven all types of cars. Gm, Chrysler, ford, Toyota, Nissan, Honda, Audi, bmw,(never driven a Mercedes actually) and toyota, Honda, Audi, and bmw are the superior group by far. The interiors on euro and Japanese cars are way better (Honda could do a little better) than anything American that I’ve driven. The handling is a lot better (American cars have zero steering response and I feel like I could drive them with my pinky finger) and they all shake like crazy. Not everything in Europe is superior to America, but when dealing with cars it’s clear who the winner is.
That looks more like the result of crappy tires, vs chassis dynamics. I am curious as to what brand and rating the stock tires are, and how the Jeep would perform with a set of decent LT Rated tires.
I love hearing from Jeep owners. "It's meant to off-road though!" No, your Compass or Grand Cherokee is not some secret rock-crawling god. It's just a badly made SUV. And even if you do take a Jeep off-road, it will get demolished by some hipster lady in a stock Subaru Outback. Baffles me why anyone would buy one.
I have now read a few comments about this test not being fair to Jeep, as the Touareg and Volvo appear to be driven less aggressively. The goal of this test is to make it through the course at a certain speed, and very obviously the Jeep can't do it. The other cars appear to be driven less aggressively because they handle the quick turns better. Cars that handle this test poorly look more aggressively driven. The same is somewhat true for autocross and track stuff as well.
FINALLY I real life test! and no a straight line 0-60 bullshit or going around a track and having paid journalist to say over and over how great a car is! Thank you
Well I gotta say my 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee handled a very similar situation much better. 60 mph freeway car next to me ran us off the road,causing me to react very much like your test. However Jeep handled it very well even after sliding from Roadway into center median strip and then back on to freeway. Scared me sure,my grandkids were in the back, but never lost control. 👍
@Kirk Phillips Despite what was shown, the test wasn’t fair for the Jeep compared to the other vehicles used in the test. Based upon physics, the Jeep performed in a reasonable manner.👊🏽☝🏽🔥
Jeep has a habit of underrating the springs for vehicle mass to create a vehicle that has a softer ride during initial test drives. If the springs are corrected for vehicle mass (as they should have been from the factory) the vehicle will have a substantially better performance in the test. If you want to prove the point to them, get corrected spring ratio springs from old man emu / arb.
I wouldn't buy anything from the fiat-Chrysler line. I worked on a 2016-17 jeep Cherokee and with less that 8 months of owner the car, the owner was experiencing bad steering behavior. Took a few parts off and i could see that the bushings in that car is shattered. 4 bushings had to be replaced, and going through a Chrysler dealer to buy the parts, i get these hard plastic bushings from china. yes it was certified dodge parts. so disgusted with how horrible the quality was. Honorable mentions are the Chrysler 200 and the dodge dart. deeply sad this company has poorer quality than even a hayundai or kia.
My boss from old internship bought his wife a chrysler 200. He said the ECU literally CAUGHT FIRE around the 10 month mark. I agree Chrysler-Fiat-Jeep is garbage. Dodge makes decent trucks but most of their cars are rather shit as well for reliability
No no no Once you noticed it could roll you started snapping the steering wheel harder ever time to try to get it to roll then popping the tire became a victory It’s a suv and you want it to handle like a sports car
I'm an American and I agree these cars are not safe. I show everyone I know that owns a jeep, this video. Very mixed reactions just like the comments on this video.
josh201086 Bogus because it was not set up or used in the same manner to the other cars. The jeep was loaded to the max which with self leveling will raise the jeep to max height as well or 11 inches of ground clearance which is too high and against owner manual recommendations for a test like this. that is an off road height and made for low speed. The suspension should have been lowered to normal ride height. Next is the flaws of the test itself, at 0:08 we see the driver cut the corner so sharp he actually passes directly over the cone and not steering around it, then at 0:41 you see the driver give the wheel an extra flick to bring it up on 2 wheels. At 0:45 you will notice a middle cone out of place by a foot for the VW which is to help the driver steer wider and smoother for a better result. During the Volvo test you can see the driver straighten the wheels after every turn to settle the car before it's next move, very unlike the steering input of the jeep. Then you have Jeep engineers show up to witness the results for themselves and now by the testers own admittance on their website the wheel lift from the original tests could not be reproduced on 11 separate runs. Then in 2014 the jeep is retested the jeep is at a lower suspension setting and driven wider and smoother like the others this time and it gets a perfect result. The Jeep is also setting global sales records putting a dent in other SUV sales which is probably why they also have to add "Don't buy Jeep Grand Cherokee" to their video. This Jeep was also tested by German magazine Auto, Motor und Sport as well as EURO-NCAP and there was no problem. Since the test result could not be duplicated again by them or anyone and there are not complaints or news story about these Jeeps flipping over at every turn and it was chosen as a top safety pick by the Institute for Highway Safety it just doesn't add up. The only thing I could find fault with is the tires on the European models don't comply well with their more grippy pavement which will lead to the bursting of tires and Jeep replaced them for the 2013 model year. Other than that if you look at all the evidence it is fishy, like I said use the Jeep correctly and it will behave fine.
I have a Grand Cherokee and it handles very well under extreme conditions. Also keep in mind this is a vehicle capable of going off road. The Tiguan and Volvo you compare it to are not as capable off road. There is a trade off. The more capable off road means it may not handle as well as a car under similar extreme conditions on a freeway. Plate C
Brian Torres They are trained professionals, the test it done the same for all cars and it’s repeated for reliability. The Jeep would’ve failed if even you or Schumacher were in it.
My father in law did an extremely quick lane change driving on the interstate when a car was stopped on the road. He was going well over 65 miles per hour, and there were no issues at all.
2:49 guess they never tested the 1st/2nd gen explorer then.. or samurai... or gmt400/gmt800 tahoe.. man the list goes on. The wk2 grand cherokee really aint the worst. Hell the Excursion had to have a 2nd lower front impact bar just so it wouldn't literally drive over cars.
Picked up a '21 Grand Cherokee and I'm curious if they've revised their stability control since this to address the issue. I also wonder if the Jeeps being tested had normal suspension instead of the air suspension would change anything.
The test performed on the Jeep wasn’t fair. Especially against the other vehicles used in the comparison. Given the physics of the Jeep, it handled itself well enough.☝🏽🔥
Dor1to McSwagger hitting a moose is not like hitting a deer. Because they're taller, the front of the car hits/breaks the legs and sends the body crashing through the windshield into the driver and passengers. Avoidance is usually lifesaving, but every year there are driver severe injuries and deaths in the US from moose strikes. If you live in an area of the country without moose, you fortunately have one less thing to worry about.
Charles Pierce check out a vid with a Cherokee and a moose Cherokee is in pretty great shape still a write off but still driver would come out alive I live in Canada I know the damage they can cause
It can be a careless pedestrian who is crossing the road. Test is called moose test but its not just about moose or deer. Collision avoidance test is more suited name but boring
It seems to need a bit harder springs and dampers but people will probably prefer the soft ones anyway The tires have enough grip to cause it to roll too much with the soft suspension. Then it needs a bit wider tires or stronger wall so they don’t fail. With off road tires, stronger and less grip it will slide a bit and might pass the test better
You’re telling me that was multiple jeeps getting their tires blown? I thought I was watching the same one over and over lol
Lol same
WAIT WHAT !?
Same car, many many tires. You can tell they're different after the end of the test, they all drive off in "slightly' different directions.
3 cars, 7 tires, 6 on film.
lmao
Maybe it was designed to hit the moose... you know, American Style.
+Hao Liu Best comment .:)
+Hao Liu on impact 2 M16s pop up from under the hood and just start spraying the moose in lead while the American flag comes out the roof and the national anthem plays from the radio..
+Hao Liu Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!
+Runawaygeek The flag needs to come out from under the tire wells (since the car will be upside down on a bit rougher road then a test track).
yeahh
I thought they were repeating the same tire blowout until the text at the end, holy shit
free tires for life, your life
Bornstray same here, le rip tires
They didn't. They simply killed 7 tyres on that day.
Bornstray me too
We swear, we took weight out and put it under specs this time, along with putting it up to the right tire pressure... Unlike the first test where we got caught overloaded the jeep by 300 lbs and having the tired under by 5 psi......
Everyone: Uh Grand Cherokee literally failed the moose test. Jeep engineers: Did someone say HeLlCaT?
The Jeep Grand Cherokee with the hellcat Engine also has more of a performance shock that is meant to keep it stable
Peichen Fang also it avoided the moose so I would say it successfully completed it
Lol 😂
this was pretty funny
Just add more power...
Still remember that one meme where they show that a cow is more aerodynamic than a Wrangler lol
Well yeah a cow is a torpedo with sticks under it and a Jeep is a several thousand pound block of material
Did you know a cow will take off if facing forward at about ~1000km/h? Cows apparently have a slight aerodynamic lift in the forward position. I just read some students research paper about it. Lol
Tom Kalas the real question is, would a cow even be at the same shape at 1000km/h?
@@Tkkalas care to share the link?
Kade Banbury, Brandon R blogs.mentor.com/robinbornoff/blog/tag/cows/
Merican cars were meant to go straight and never turn
not only their people are homophobic!
@@trasher84 meh. We have enough flamers I dont think that's true
Hebe you clever herd of a Chevy zl1 zr1 ford gt350r Or gt Dodge Viper acr?
chance powell yeah too bad this was made by Italians fucking idiot
@@trevordelarosa3599 yikes awfully aggressive reaction to a joke dont you think?
That Volkswagen looked really stable
Well, yeah, it's Volkswagen. Don't trust that engine though, the pistons are just waiting to free themselves through a crater they made in the engine.
@@alexanderhamilton4258 the Touareg has no engine issues. I own a 2013 with 208000km on it.
@@amirhossainzadeh3951 ever heard of different engines in one car?
I drive It for two years .. it s fantastic , electronic is superb , never drive a suv like this ... The electronics make is so quick and stable .. you don't fell the wheight
@@amirhossainzadeh3951 i'm from germany and its my first time hearing something like this lol. Bs.
I can say this never happened to my Jeep because it never ran.
@HenryScored underrated comment of the century I'm fucking dying 😂💀
Broooo 💀💀💀💀
HenryScored
💀💀
ha ha
😭😭😭
Lmfao this dude wearing a bicycle helmet 😭
Elijah Hernandez better than nothing?
Dewey you Perry
So is more
He also said yeep😂😂
Right?! Very official testing gear 😂. What a "Yoke" of a test lmaooo
If the car rolls over better to hit the tarmac with the helmet and not with your head.
In america we hit the moose, we do not avoid it.
Good job you just totalled your car moron, a few scratches on the side and maybe a control arm are better than reinstalling the engine and frame.
Yeah F the moose and put the meat 🍖 in the freezer 😏
G @ no we install metal bumpers and big bull fenders.
@733Rafael Ah yes, 7 ton military truck do well. We can even run over enemies. ISIS no champ.
Hahaha. Ha. Ha. No. Not funny.
Nobody:
TH-cam: Moose Test? I got you
Lol same here
Im not not going to click on this
@@danm1063 you had to click on it to make this comment lmao
@@danm1063 6huku jsskauseaekriarieRURURiEIEIeieieaiiaejjea
@@medqenmedness229 jioo
1:20 engineer considering another career, knowing it is impossible to make that car overcome the laws of physics
So an american car/suv handles dangerously? Whats new?
Armesis P ikr lol
Armesis P actually fiat owns Chrysler so technically it's not an American car.
Jose Garcia just because it owns it doesn't mean they still don't design and build it in America you fucking idiot
Ayyy Lmfao omg are you mad? Lol calm down keyboard warrior
+Armesis P A Fiat car/suv handles dangerously? What's new? FTFY
Someone should do a moose test with a Ford F-350 Superduty and just drive straight through the cones.
They should put a real moose there.
haha that would be a true moose test xD
@@MrTheHillfolk It would be so destructive though. A total waste. There would be nothing left of the moose.
@@Corb.ontheCob
Why not , they didn't swerve to avoid the moose ?😁
*"Fuck you moose, I ain't stoppin'! MURRRICAAAA!!!"*
Guy's got a bicycle helmet on. Come on man get you some real helmets.
hahahahaha!!!!!
biodot88 The driver didn't have fuck all! 😳
really a helmet is more dangerous in the event of a crash. the added weight on your neck could lead to fatal injuries. also the airbag systems arent built do deal with helmets. anyway.... wearing a helmet without a bucket seat is more dangerous than wearing no helmet.
+SBK Stóre Just less protective.
He was probably more worried about smacking his head on the door frame and b pillar.
1:20 guy reading laptop: Just as I thought its a P.O.S.
😂😂
Kurt Jones Funniest comment ever ,rolling haha
💩💩💩🤣🤣🤣
I see the cars driven the same way. The in car of the Jeep did not look overly aggressive. It is suppose to mimic avoiding a moose. Only difference is that the other cars suspension, electronic and tire package do a MUCH better job of responding to the inputs to make a safe lane change instead of bouncing and lifting the wheels.
It's not really a moose and not a lane change. It simulates a suddenly appearing obstacle on a 2 lane country road. Driver swerves through opposite lane to avoid collision and must not collide with anything off road (the outer cones).
Thats exactly what happened to me and i end it upside down on a jeep grand Cherokee 2 years ago. Total lost!
Were you ok?
No, he died.
@@TheLimeGreenMan again?
TheLimeGreenMan how is he commenting then
Obedient Octopus yes nothing happen to me. It was a miracle? The insure guy toll me in his experience this kind of accidents the result its death of the passanger.
A Jeep ad pop-up before this video, I don’t think TH-cam’s algorithm works just fine...
After nearly 100 years and Chrysler still can’t figure out how to make a tire stay on the rim
I think it's just the SUVs, I drove a Dodge Magnum R/T and it handled extremely well for a 2 ton station wagon.
@@Tracert-mc1hu Comparing a Magnum to an SUV.
@@Tracert-mc1hu How is that comparable?
@@jetstream454 It's a Chrysler product, so don't trash talk Chrysler as a whole. It's just the SUVs they can't figure out.
@@Tracert-mc1hu Chrysler products tend to be subpar. Magnum happens to be a decent car lol
The “Yeep Grand Cherokee” 😂
YEEP
Yeep heep hooray
*Y* *E* *E* *P*
Fuckin dead omg 😂😂😂
00:57 😂
That's a coffin not a car.
Yeh, but what a coffin it is!!!!!
Um ACTUALLY, it's a Sport Utility Coffin. Get it right.
You mean a hearse 😆
I’m still here..
So no, not a coffin.
I wish American car reviewers were thorough like this, instead of simply saying that every new car that comes out is the best car ever.
They don't and you're just fishing for likes.
Get a clue
Ya, we all say that.
Jeep : Moose test!
Tyres : Ah shit, here we go again!
As an engineer watching this, I hope Jeep has taken the issue seriously. I don't know if it would be worth testing a newer model. The roll issue didn't surprise me so much. I've driven them, and they are a very soft, pillowy riding vehicle. This is an excellent recipe for body roll and especially body inertia. What was more interesting to me was the tire. This is a more dangerous issue than the roll in my eyes because it directly affects stability of the car. It shouldn't happen under normally achievable driving inputs on a very stable surface. To think I can turn the wheel hard and pop a tire is scary. It should not be possible. To Jeep's defense, development will only contain what they have traditionally used for testing and what the government requires for testing. Older Jeeps weren't stable either, but no one complained. It was just expected back at that time. Manufacturers got better. Jeep did too, just not far enough. As they further develop their testing programs and fundamental design goals, they do need to incorporate new testing methods. There is a good side to this. Jeep is now incorporating Fiat's testing procedures into their Jeep development. The first to see this was the new Cherokee. This testing does include lateral load testing which was something Jeep hadn't previously tested. This was something Jeep presented in another video you can find here on TH-cam regarding the Cherokee testing. I'm hoping this is part of the next generate grand cherokee too and helps develop a much better vehicle. At the moment, it might be beneficial to test the new Cherokee and see if that car handles the moose test well. The new Renegade would also be a good test. Both will show a modern representation of Jeep. I say modern because the Grand Cherokee has been on the same generation since 2011.
Tire went because it hit the cone under full pressure of the corner
In an average crash trucks will give better protection than any car. Don't know why the vid advises ppl not to use Jeeps. They are far better at protecting ppl than any tin car sports that passes this test. Good test though, it is not representative though. That's why it is not in NCAP. It like playing a piano with a hammer, just good fun! Ha ha ha
@@browpetj the problem is that while you may receive more protection, the car is far more likely to roll resulting in a more violent crash.
@@josephpenn1115 good info, thanks :)
Well, their merge with fiat and Italian taste with European market is the best thing that could happen to them IMO. Fiat introduced the criteria that the previous platforms were lacking, safety, slick driving experience and more sophisticated exteriors, but kept what American cars are known for: unbeatable comfort and “cushy” rides. I must give it to American cars, they’re comfy. It’s coming from the fact that roads and streets in North America are made completely different, with long straight highways and wide streets. It just works. And it’s coming from me, an European engineer who lives in Canada and drives a brand new ram 1500 Laramie. I’ve “dated” both continents and I know that America and Europa are two different girls.
Mabye the jeep is supposed to drive through the moose.
Hahahahahahahaha
Christon Jones lmfaoo
it's certainly not going to drive around it haha
There are other situations where the ability to swerve safely would be a good thing. You can't drive through everything.
Muricah
that camera man has balls of steel
Hum...something called tripod is very practical to avoid lost your life.........
lucas Von Heiz it is but at the very end i see a camera man standing there
He's still standing directly in front of it.
Seth Soul hahahaha
...and a long lens
I did this test when I was in the police academy. It was called Collision Avoidance and we did it in a Ford Taurus at the same speed. Man... the test gave me nightmares because I thought it was difficult and here we have these guys smoothly doing it in SUVs
That test is part of the regular driver's ed. in Norway and Sweden.
the "yeep" grand Cherokee lol
VQPower35 as soon as you I saw your comment I was at 0:57 XD
In Sweden we pronounce j like y.
Kh Kh Uhm no. So Ylva is Jylva? Jytterdörren?
Veroxzes it's so the English talking people understand, the j is pronounced in a different way in English, the closest letter to j in pronounce is y. Sorry for my English
VQPower35 YYYYYEEEP!!!
Yeep Grand Cherokee is ment to drive through a moose.
Ha!
+NOTO RIOUS Only in a YEEP
+NOTO RIOUS HAHAHAHAHAHAHA LMAO.
+NOTO RIOUS Moose weigh more than the Yeep. I think you are confusing DEER with Moose.
We encounter wild turkeys , geese, deer, elk, bears, and beavers on our roads.
Jeep's suspension seems too soft and it starts wobbling during sharp turns. The tilt is too much and it cases the car to almost flip over and/or jump after the exit. The suspension needs to be a bit stiffer and i think the wheels need to have a small angle under which the touch the ground.
Yeah. its like they choose the suspension for its off road capabilities rather than what most Cherokee's are used for. On road driving. Its got way more give then is needed to the point that its dangerous. Im not to sure of its anti roll safety equipment but it seems to be rather lacking, it looks more setup to 'flex' and 'crawl' offroad like its brothers the wrangler etc.
MrSterling314 Actually the suspension is adjustable, just turn the dial and lower it and problem is solved. It is not the trucks fault if you don't use the suspension setting properly. It was lowered for the 2014 test and no problems.
MrSterling314 Eactly - don't compare an off road capable vehicle like the Grand Cherokee to a Volvo wagon that can't go anywhere off road and then say Jeep is bad. Try this test with a loaded Landrover Discover, or a Mercedes G500 and see if THEY roll over as much as the jeep. th-cam.com/video/ltH7vhFbZwA/w-d-xo.html
My grand handled great when I had to swerve to keep from hitting a pickup truck with a trailer on the interstate coming home from work. I was doing 70 mph, and he was doing 40mph with no tail lights at night. The speed limit was 70
I have jeep 4.7 v8 from 2005 sometime I'm scared
This is the 2011+ models
Blown tire is still better than flipping!
Monkeyclub
Oh my bad man we don't have moose here.. I'd still take a blown tire over flipping any day. Watch out for those moose!
don't have a moose? you may have other dangers and i wish that nothing happens to put you in that situation.
This car is not supposed to be driven on road, but off road, when such things don't happen
you guys keep talking about a moose test, but not a single moose is on your video.
Preach it dude
Don't buy Jeep Grand Cherokee if you can't afford tires.
What? That doesnt make sense
roberto badillo it’s a joke. It means it blows a lot of tires haha
I tried this with my 15 jeep GC limited 3.6 with fortera tires at 36psi. 1 passenger. My results were definitely better. No blown tires but i did experience wheel/tire lift during the apex of the right turn. not off the ground but slight loss of traction. Test was done in Auto terrain mode. 30 35 40mph. Not sure if jeep fixed the issue. But i was able to complete the moose test successfully.
The only comment that brought me some relief actually lol. I am considering buying a GC but this video is raising a few eyebrows
@@mardraus9318 Don't buy an SUV, they're fucking shit at literally everything.
@@mardraus9318 you trust the comments of people on youtube. you must be as smart as the engineers who made the Jeep.
@@rforracing damn bro, but isn’t it weird you checking a 1 year old comment? Looks like you put a lot more love and trust onto youtube comments than I do 😒
the excuses in the comments on this video are pathetic. A documented, correctly set-up test and people still whinge.
Test was not done correctly that's why the complaints. 2014 test was perfect and this 2012 test would have been too if the test was done correct.
*****
consumers don't make that distinction, even if it was true. It's like saying it's fine if your sports car overheats in the city; it's not designed for that environment. That kind of thinking was around 30 years ago but we've moved on...
***** What rot. How do you get to the off road area if not by road - and if you only want to use it for farming buy a tractor.
***** No, they should have got it right first time, as they did a few years later... th-cam.com/video/8Fs5M8GuvcUA/w-d-xo.htmldequate body control and braking control.
Not Zachary, the swedes need to not deflate the tires and add extra weight to the jeep. They shouldnt mess with the factory settings on any vehicle just to make the company look bad.
Typical Chrysler junk.
T AN really? So what do you call the Dodge Charger and Challenger then?
@@chaoszombie9995
Id call them typical Chrysler junk as well. Or fiat junk.
Chaos Zombie999 expensive junk
i agree with the american part of the group (chrysler) but you can't say the same For Alfa Giulia or Alfa Stelvio for example on the italian part, that are today in some points better than German cars.
@@chaoszombie9995 they were made a long time before chrysler bought dodge out.
Bicycle helment. Yep that'll save you. LOL
wearing a real helmet without a bucket seat and a head and neck system would be leathal.
Kokainsamurai no. no it isn't.
Cristian Lara yes it is. have you ever read the instruction manual of a crash helmet? in the event of an accident the extra weight of the crash helmet would instantly break your spinal cord.
Just to save his head from smacking around in the car.
Cristian helmets ain’t light, if you crash you’d get some mad whiplash
1:53 Jeep commercial: “Jeep, the only car that can explode pylons on two wheels while dodging a moose”
Sorry but it's the tyre exploding
@@bobthebuilder2922 did you really just spell “tire” with a “y” 🤣
@@iCazZiStronZiHAHAHAH FUCKING TYRE AM I RITE XD LOLOLOL.
Yeah just ignore my comment and focus on unnecessary shit like tyre vs. tire...
At first i was like "what do you expect, throwing an suv in a corner like that"
then i saw vw and volvo and was like "oh ok lol"
*Big props to you guys. Show some balls. I thought you were annoying me with the same shot of a popping tire over and over but these were all different ones. I am gob smacked.*
Moose, deer, whatever it is, I've seen drivers loose control over a damn racoon trying to avoid it. Thing is, no matter what you drive, odds are your going to merge to your left and ram a car/truck/semi or merge to your right and end up in the ditch/median wall or dead. Your chances are better to grab the steering wheel tight and ram the son of bitch and it might save your life. Planning and split second reactions don't always go together. Let the vehicle insurance take care of it.. This video doesn't change my opinion in any way. Just interesting to watch
I agree. Anyone trying a high speed 'maneuver' that is not a professional driver will most likely hurt themselves and everyone involved. Don't try this unless you already know you can (from practice). And on wet, snow, or ice, never try it. Hit the brakes, you will reduce speed more drastically instead of sliding off road or into something else or even over a freaking cliff on a mountain road.
The one thing to take notice is of is HOW to get out of a possible roll-over situation. If the driver did not corrective steer, the truck would have flipped for sure. Many of them would have.
You are right. Brake or ram directly can be a better choice than try to avoid. But the point of the test is to evaluate the vehicle behaviour in the case the driver has to avoid a collission. The scandinavian invented this and they chose the name "moose test" because if you just ram a big tall animal it´s legs get hit the bumper and then the heavy body crashes to the windshield potentially killing the driver/passenger.
LOL. Yes, a moose test, describing the animal. Wonderful. 'But', there is something to consider here - for this test, all the vehicles are loaded to their maximum capacity. Anymore weight, and things could start breaking. When you see others doing this test, they do not do this. Lets see the test of a single driver (most common), and one fully loaded.
I bet your most obvious and pointless statement they all pass the first test. Maybe you don't understand it yet - i am helping my sarcastic tone 'drives' it in - adding maximum weight to vehicles alters the dynamics of all systems - they are calibrated for the most common situations.
An simple example is if vehicles where designed to be driven under full weight 100% of the time, the brakes would be double the size, larger tires, more heavy duty suspensions, and larger drive train components. We all know driving at maximum capacity make the vehicle stop longer. Fusterating having to explain this. Just think about it. Everything changes at maximum capacity.
That doesn't apply to moose. If you hit a moose straight on, you're most likely going to get crushed to death.
...and keep your speed appropriate for road/moose conditions. Jeeps rule in my book.
I have the 2012 Grand Cherokee 5.7 4x4 and it takes corners nicely. I've put a few thousand miles on it empty and towing and it feels pretty safe to me. Engine is massive amounts of power and trans works just fine with 8000 pounds towed behind.
The camera man gots some balls.
Conan or you know....they put a camera on a stand
Taureg or, you know, in the last scene you can see the fucking cameraman and his ginormous balls right next to the camera on the stand.
+Christopher B it is too far from him you know...
Old boxy Cherokee is where it's at. Handles horribly, bad crash test results, but inline six was bulletproof and it handled off-road like a boss.
This is an on-road test of surviving incidents on the way to your off-road fun.
It handles pretty good,lacks abs and esp systems tho,but if you are buying an xj you kinda dont care about those systems. And the inline six,well it the 4.0 can beat the plastic vw tdi and plastic volvo engines anyday in reliability
Is there a test to see how a Land Rover performs this test?
+Gaming with Mikey! I'm sure it fails loudly too, but with a synthetic "I'm sorry"/"Beg your pardon" voice coming out from the dashboard.
They do the moose test with every car they test. The only cars wich have had this dangerous behaviour is this and the first generation mercedes a class
The Range Rover can probably do much worse without such issues, they have great engineering behind them. Sure they aren’t as reliable but they do the job well. It’s like the bentayga and most German SUV’s they drive very well, more likes cars so there is very little compromise
First of all, let us all accept that Jeep should do something. 20+ years ago an SUV would've been expected to perform like this but today with technology and computers there should be plenty of data and engineering capabilities to make this safer. That said, this is a bullshit test. The Jeep platform is not the same as the other two vehicles. The Jeep has a higher stance and higher center of gravity considering the base frame and drivetrain more closely resembles a truck then a car. The other two vehicles are cars pretending to be SUV's, I wouldn't even call them crossovers. They are essentially sedan's updated to be station wagons. Thus they still drive like a car. Would I expect an Expedition or Escalade to perform like those cars? Not even close, that said I certainly would hope ALL SUV's would be aware of this and adjust accordingly however if you don't like the way a truck or "jeep" handles then don't buy one. They ARE NOT the same as buying a car pretending to be an SUV. Let's not compare apples to oranges, and expect the same performance.
“Jeep Chrysler loaded with 470 kg (1036lbs)”, that sounds light for a typical American family of 5. 😉
of five children
AutoSherlock 😂
Only if they're from Milwaukee
Please stop bullying us :(
phuc ewe it’s a stereotype it’s mostly not true yes there are fat people like any other place on earth it just not in America you guys take stereotypes way to seriously
Good car for wife xD
ex-wife!
舅服你LOL
Ty jsi všude kde je byť jen zmínka o autě 😁
When you want a divorce but you don't want to pay alimony xD
for mother in law...
I love this test. Wow this heavier, longer, wider, and taller car with twice the engine displacement does not corner as well as this smaller car...
@Xiones11 Exactly !!🔥☝🏽
This looks more like the testers trying to sell VW's. Why don't they try the same test with a Range Rover. What a joke this test was.
I want to see a moose fail the Jeep Grand Cherokee test !
thats not going to happen lol... the moose is way more stable than a jeep...
Dead 🤣
😂😂
A whitetail deer can defeat a grand cherokee…
I owned a Jeep Grand Cherokee once. After 3 years, I was done with the POS. Plastic all over, poor handling and loud. But it never once got stuck in deep snow.
That's the thing they're great in snow, their electronics and transmission issues are the major negative with them.
What do you drive now I wonder? 🤔
that looked alot more fun than the VW and volvo tho.
Best comment by far! xD
amazing hahahah!!!
1:35 "I'm not stupid!!"
Wish my Aunt saw this years ago. Her Jeep roll in Emergency on Freeway, she was ok but WOW...
anyway, the touareg looks incredibly stable doing the moose test, please do the moose test of bmw x6, porsche cayene and range rover sport
I'm a big VW and Volvo fan and i can't stop watching this video. wow.
The Great Doge I see you everywhere
VW fan? You wanna be a junior mechanic?
How much do they pay u 2 drive the Jeep faster ?
I don't see what these test could prove, vehicles have different steering ratios and steering control systems. A benefit in one area will likely come with costs in another. you can see that the Volvo didn't react nearly as fast, that's not really a good thing.
Volvo all the way, Did you see how well it handled that test! I've got the V70 3.2L Cross Country.
American cars are awful. Rented a few in the states (suv) and the wobble like crazy.
Google User Toyota Camrys wobble like crazy
V70 nice! What year?
You do realize SUVs are probably the worst representation of american cars
William Brewer I’ve driven all types of cars. Gm, Chrysler, ford, Toyota, Nissan, Honda, Audi, bmw,(never driven a Mercedes actually) and toyota, Honda, Audi, and bmw are the superior group by far. The interiors on euro and Japanese cars are way better (Honda could do a little better) than anything American that I’ve driven. The handling is a lot better (American cars have zero steering response and I feel like I could drive them with my pinky finger) and they all shake like crazy. Not everything in Europe is superior to America, but when dealing with cars it’s clear who the winner is.
That looks more like the result of crappy tires, vs chassis dynamics. I am curious as to what brand and rating the stock tires are, and how the Jeep would perform with a set of decent LT Rated tires.
I didnt no a tire could come off the beed from doing that im guessing it happens on high profile tires
Yeah i no it cant happen while parked
I love hearing from Jeep owners. "It's meant to off-road though!" No, your Compass or Grand Cherokee is not some secret rock-crawling god. It's just a badly made SUV.
And even if you do take a Jeep off-road, it will get demolished by some hipster lady in a stock Subaru Outback. Baffles me why anyone would buy one.
Based
Makes me think of the Ford Explorers from the 1990’s that loved to roll over.
Yeah all caused from moron drivers thinking they were driving sports cars when their Firestone tires blew up LOL.
I have now read a few comments about this test not being fair to Jeep, as
the Touareg and Volvo appear to be driven less aggressively. The goal
of this test is to make it through the course at a certain speed, and
very obviously the Jeep can't do it. The other cars appear to be driven less aggressively because they handle the quick turns better. Cars that handle this test poorly look more aggressively driven. The same is somewhat true for autocross and track stuff as well.
No the car is just bad
How many times u said “aggressively”
this is bullshit, look how the guy drove the other cars, in the jeep he was faster and wilder
@Sergio López my thoughts exactly, bro!
I have the 2014 5.7 overland and never been happier. This is a suv not a drift car. It’s not meant to go fast around corners it’s meant to haul ass
FINALLY I real life test!
and no a straight line 0-60 bullshit or going around a track and having paid journalist to say over and over how great a car is! Thank you
A bit upset Land/Range Rover was not included in this video...
Well I gotta say my 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee handled a very similar situation much better. 60 mph freeway car next to me ran us off the road,causing me to react very much like your test. However Jeep handled it very well even after sliding from Roadway into center median strip and then back on to freeway. Scared me sure,my grandkids were in the back, but never lost control. 👍
@Kirk Phillips Despite what was shown, the test wasn’t fair for the Jeep compared to the other vehicles used in the test. Based upon physics, the Jeep performed in a reasonable manner.👊🏽☝🏽🔥
There`s another video saying that 2014 models were tested and they passed the test.
@@jaimemurray6654by ' based upon physics' you mean considering it's laughably unstable center of gravity?
The 2014 model was fixed due to this problem being exposed. Ridiculous for a modern vehicle to be put into production as unstable as the 2012 model.
Did you make a sharp turn like in this video?
Jeep has a habit of underrating the springs for vehicle mass to create a vehicle that has a softer ride during initial test drives. If the springs are corrected for vehicle mass (as they should have been from the factory) the vehicle will have a substantially better performance in the test. If you want to prove the point to them, get corrected spring ratio springs from old man emu / arb.
but how did it to in the elk test?
lmaooo he is wearing a bicycle helmet😂
Hahaha safety!
I don’t blame him
I wouldn't buy anything from the fiat-Chrysler line. I worked on a 2016-17 jeep Cherokee and with less that 8 months of owner the car, the owner was experiencing bad steering behavior. Took a few parts off and i could see that the bushings in that car is shattered. 4 bushings had to be replaced, and going through a Chrysler dealer to buy the parts, i get these hard plastic bushings from china. yes it was certified dodge parts. so disgusted with how horrible the quality was. Honorable mentions are the Chrysler 200 and the dodge dart. deeply sad this company has poorer quality than even a hayundai or kia.
ThirtyOne Fifty *hyundai not hayundai even though thats how everyone prounounces but its actually hiyundai
ThirtyOne Fifty @ from 2005 they changed to much, before that it’s pretty much ok and solid.
My boss from old internship bought his wife a chrysler 200. He said the ECU literally CAUGHT FIRE around the 10 month mark. I agree Chrysler-Fiat-Jeep is garbage. Dodge makes decent trucks but most of their cars are rather shit as well for reliability
My mom had a Jeep Cherokee for 6 months and traded it in on a Toyota 4Runner way way better
but muh hellcat...
No no no
Once you noticed it could roll you started snapping the steering wheel harder ever time to try to get it to roll then popping the tire became a victory
It’s a suv and you want it to handle like a sports car
Why not compare it to the Mercedes-Benz GLE-class (W166 ) that shares the same platform?
they test the cars that companys give em to test. If Mercedes-Benz want to give em the old GLE they would test it.
I'm an American and I agree these cars are not safe. I show everyone I know that owns a jeep, this video. Very mixed reactions just like the comments on this video.
Actually this jeep was awarded as a top safety pick, also the test is bogus, I can tell you when used properly these jeeps do not act like this.
tom h how's it bogus?
I'm anxious to know how it's bogus too..
josh201086 Bogus because it was not set up or used in the same manner to the other cars. The jeep was loaded to the max which with self leveling will raise the jeep to max height as well or 11 inches of ground clearance which is too high and against owner manual recommendations for a test like this. that is an off road height and made for low speed. The suspension should have been lowered to normal ride height. Next is the flaws of the test itself, at 0:08 we see the driver cut the corner so sharp he actually passes directly over the cone and not steering around it, then at 0:41 you see the driver give the wheel an extra flick to bring it up on 2 wheels. At 0:45 you will notice a middle cone out of place by a foot for the VW which is to help the driver steer wider and smoother for a better result. During the Volvo test you can see the driver straighten the wheels after every turn to settle the car before it's next move, very unlike the steering input of the jeep. Then you have Jeep engineers show up to witness the results for themselves and now by the testers own admittance on their website the wheel lift from the original tests could not be reproduced on 11 separate runs. Then in 2014 the jeep is retested the jeep is at a lower suspension setting and driven wider and smoother like the others this time and it gets a perfect result. The Jeep is also setting global sales records putting a dent in other SUV sales which is probably why they also have to add "Don't buy Jeep Grand Cherokee" to their video. This Jeep was also tested by German magazine Auto, Motor und Sport as well as EURO-NCAP and there was no problem. Since the test result could not be duplicated again by them or anyone and there are not complaints or news story about these Jeeps flipping over at every turn and it was chosen as a top safety pick by the Institute for Highway Safety it just doesn't add up. The only thing I could find fault with is the tires on the European models don't comply well with their more grippy pavement which will lead to the bursting of tires and Jeep replaced them for the 2013 model year. Other than that if you look at all the evidence it is fishy, like I said use the Jeep correctly and it will behave fine.
tom h agreed
Wow really the yeep company needs to see this.
yep
+dahbestgamer they know it...
They did, and proved the video is completely false.
How would they prove something like that? We have all the proof we need
Fuck jeep
I have a Grand Cherokee and it handles very well under extreme conditions. Also keep in mind this is a vehicle capable of going off road. The Tiguan and Volvo you compare it to are not as capable off road.
There is a trade off. The more capable off road means it may not handle as well as a car under similar extreme conditions on a freeway.
Plate C
VW was excellent !! It didn’t look like you even made a hard turn...brilliant
No seat belt while testing rolling over of the car. Ballzy!
Um you can see the seat belt in the outside camera view and in the rear view mirror...
uabir they're amateurs lmao I don't take this test seriously at all hahaha
Brian Torres They are trained professionals, the test it done the same for all cars and it’s repeated for reliability. The Jeep would’ve failed if even you or Schumacher were in it.
My father in law did an extremely quick lane change driving on the interstate when a car was stopped on the road. He was going well over 65 miles per hour, and there were no issues at all.
2:49 guess they never tested the 1st/2nd gen explorer then.. or samurai... or gmt400/gmt800 tahoe.. man the list goes on. The wk2 grand cherokee really aint the worst. Hell the Excursion had to have a 2nd lower front impact bar just so it wouldn't literally drive over cars.
Wasn't the samurai's test fabricated by consumer reports to some extent?
Picked up a '21 Grand Cherokee and I'm curious if they've revised their stability control since this to address the issue. I also wonder if the Jeeps being tested had normal suspension instead of the air suspension would change anything.
The Touareg..Excellent stability👏🏼👏🏼
0:22 that plane is like hello guys I'm just watching how you test your Cherokee XD
Não parece ser a mesma velocidade dos outros
That driver is awesome!! He said it's lousy! I freaking love that guy!
I love this guys accent. "Last time we tested the yeet grand cherokee" haha. people getting yeeted in those jeeps by the moose.
Damn I had two of these, a 2015 and 2017. Loved them
MikeCharlieAlpha they're dope I have a 2012. This test is absurd
The test performed on the Jeep wasn’t fair. Especially against the other vehicles used in the comparison. Given the physics of the Jeep, it handled itself well enough.☝🏽🔥
I will say I swapped out my coil springs for the eibach pro lowering kit and tried a slalom it handled like a sports car mine is a 2011 5.7 2wd
Why was the Jeep going faster than the others...??? Y??
Looked like a lot more steering input with the Jeep. Like they jerked the steering wheel much harder
It's faked, jeep didnt send a large enough check.
What did you clock it at?
@@suntoritime use the eyes and judge the speed, if you're eyes are good
better off just hitting the moose lol what year is this jeep do they have test on the newer models
Dor1to McSwagger well then it probably would fail the IHSA collision test. I know it has a less than satisfactory rating for the offset crash test
Dor1to McSwagger hitting a moose is not like hitting a deer. Because they're taller, the front of the car hits/breaks the legs and sends the body crashing through the windshield into the driver and passengers. Avoidance is usually lifesaving, but every year there are driver severe injuries and deaths in the US from moose strikes. If you live in an area of the country without moose, you fortunately have one less thing to worry about.
Charles Pierce check out a vid with a Cherokee and a moose Cherokee is in pretty great shape still a write off but still driver would come out alive I live in Canada I know the damage they can cause
It can be a careless pedestrian who is crossing the road. Test is called moose test but its not just about moose or deer. Collision avoidance test is more suited name but boring
The point is not MOOSE, its human... if you have to swing not to hit someone, you don't deserve to DIE too
I think that everyone is missing the fun side of this, it's like driving a roller-coaster to work.
people forget the jeep is not designed to be used to go to work at all....
this test is like testing a plane for its ability to float in the ocean.
Would like to see the same test results with Cherokee who has quadra lift suspension.
NO MOOSE WERE HURT IN THE MAKING OF THIS VIDEO
Obviously. It’s cones you idiot
@@burberrycurry7517 the joke was right in front of you...
Simple Inverso okay yeep
A moose once bit my sister
The sweeds figured out what most people know already. FCA vehicles suck.
It seems to need a bit harder springs and dampers but people will probably prefer the soft ones anyway
The tires have enough grip to cause it to roll too much with the soft suspension. Then it needs a bit wider tires or stronger wall so they don’t fail.
With off road tires, stronger and less grip it will slide a bit and might pass the test better
What cheap-o tires were those? My 2013 Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland handles better than this mess.