I'm tasked with looking for a backup vehicle for my wife in case something goes wrong with her P38 Range Rover. It has been good to us so far, but we live in the sticks and now that she's working, she needs a second vehicle to get to work as it's too far to walk and apparently bicycling wasn't my best suggestion .
The original brief was to find her "something cool", but apparently I didn't understand that that mostly meant Jeep Wranglers. Most of the stuff I thought she'd find cool and interesting was noped.
I narrowed it down to either a 4.0 TJ or a 2012-on JK Unlimited, although the latter would likely end up as her primary vehicle. Honestly I would prefer to stick with a decent TJ as a backup vehicle as the longer term plan is to get her a JL Unlimited as the primary vehicle anyway. Most of the JKs that aren't thrashed to hell and have salvage titles are really in the "primary vehicle" price range.
So far I've figured out the following for TJs:
- They rust. What a surprise to someone who's owned a CJ7 in the past
- We want a 2002+ to get the four speed slushbox, and obviously we want the 4.0.
- I'd prefer a mostly stock one with a hardtop (ideally an Unlimited), so I might as well try to find a herd of unicorns instead
And the JK:
- Haven't seen much rust on those, is that because they hold up better or because they're better at hiding it?
- We want a 2012+ with the 3.6
- Unmolested ones are also in the rocking horse dropping category, but easier to find than TJs
I would want to keep the budget below $15k although given the splendid resale value of Wranglers in general I think I can justify spending a bit more, but then it would have to be a potential primary driver for a while if the RR gives up the ghost.
Box of rocks levels of complexity would be appreciated, plus one of the big advantages is that I shouldn't have a problem finding a mechanic around here to work on it if I don't want to.
What else do I need to know about Jeeps? And yes, I know they don't make the best daily drivers unless your daily drive is across Moab.