So I've been doing my own little experiment lately. Now most of you may say "DUH!" on some of this, but I was curious and had to try it out to see how well this worked out.
So I have a 1995 XJ Cherokee and my wife has 2003 Durango. Both do not have ABS, no limited slip, and have Part Time 4WD.
Important Specs:
Cherokee
Curb Weight: ~2932 lbs
Ground Clearance: 8.3 inches
Wheel Base: 101.4 inches
Height: 63.8 in.
Length: 166.9 in.
Tires: General Grabber AW Radials 225/75-15
Brakes: Disc Front, Drum Rear
Durango
Curb weight: ~4379 lbs.
Ground clearance: 8.5 in.
Wheel base: 116 in.
Height: 70.5 in.
Length: 193.5 in.
Tires: Pathfinder All-Terrains 255/70R16
Brakes: 4-Wheel Disc
Now, I have taken both out in deep snow and skating rink quality snow packed streets.Now realize that I'm talking about snow on the roads, I'm not stupid, I'm not going to go blasting through the snow off-road, I've been there and it's been negative experiences every time. These are my testing notes:
Cherokee
The tires I have on this truck are crap. They have the worst traction rating in everything past dry pavement. I can run 2WD on snow covered streets, but if it gets too slippery, I have to shift into 4WD. When I have it in 4WD, taking off from a stop is effortless. I think I could have bald tires and this thing would still trudge along without missing a beat. It takes off just fine.
Braking: Braking isn't horrible. No ABS kind of blows, but when I let off the brakes, it grabs traction again, get back on the throttle and I can whip the back end of it around and go the direction you need to go. Even with the tires with the crappy traction rating, this still stops descent on the slippery streets.
In deep snow (1-2 ft deep), this plows through it with no problem. At speed I can blast through 3 ft tall drifts with no problem. I would think that the ground clearance would be an issue, but it doesn't seem to be.
Durango
At this point I have 40,000 miles on the tires. They are worn, but still have some tread. But since these were new, I learned the hard way that All-Terrains are crap when it comes to traction on slippery surfaces. This isn't my first go-round, but I kind of had a mental lapse when I bought them. I don't take this truck off-road, so the A/Ts are kind of pointless. With no limited slip, I have to ALWAYS have the truck in 4WD when the weather sucks.
Braking: This thing slides everywhere. There have been a couple times I have considered ejecting myself from the vehicle . With a truck this large and being over 4000lbs, this thing needs ABS. Why in 2003 Dodge did not make this a standard feature, I have no clue, but it was stupid on their part. Now I partially blame the lack of ABS, the weight, and tires. That combination is just bad.
In deep snow, this truck can pull through it just fine thanks to the All-Terrains. When it comes to the drifts at speed, I have gotten this thing stuck a couple times. One of them was on my unplowed street last year. I think it comes back to weight; if this truck was 800-1000lbs lighter, it probably wouldn't have as much of a problem as it does.
My conclusion:
When AMC originally developed the Cherokee, they definitely tested it in the worst winter weather possible and developed it to work in it as well. I feel comfortable driving this truck in the inclement weather. Even as small as the Cherokee is, I feel safe in it. It gets around just fine in the snow. It's weight is under 3000lbs, it has just over a 100 inch wheelbase, and has a low center of gravity. These factors I believe, help it get around without many issues in the winter weather.
When it comes to the Durango, it's no different from larger SUVs. Sure it can get going in the snow just fine, but when it comes to anything else important to driving in winter weather, I'd rather stay home and have some hot chocolate. I fear my life in this truck sometimes. This truck is all over the place, I can't even try to drive it like I drive the Jeep. It comes to light more and more why people shouldn't be driving these like tanks in the winter. I really don't want to drive it sometimes, but the wife prefers it over the Jeep.
When it comes to being comfortable, the Durango definitely is better than the Jeep. But when it comes to driving without any major issues and feeling safe, the Jeep wins this competition.