Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^
Yikes. I didn’t realize I touched such a nerve. I feel like I see crvs and other cuvs getting towed all the time. I’ve spent a lot of time out west driving the highways.
Sorry for not giving your ignorance the proper deference. You may "feel like you see crvs and cuvs getting towed all the time" but you don't. In fact, most "cuvs" are too heavy for most class A RVs. You generally need a rear-engine diesel for those, and most of the RVs you see are gas with a Ford V8 in the chassis -- the same thing you would find in your basic pickup truck.
Just got done with traffic in the 495 bridge over the Potomac. Saw an rv towing a Chevy equinox.
My equinox was a death trap. It was determined to kill me. My jeep has been great.
It takes no more gas than a car or other SUV. And, how much you drive is equally important. You can be driving 1000 a month with a small car or 100-200 a month with a Jeep and you'd still have less enviromental impact with the Jeep. I don't get why people care what others drive.
Off topic, but what issues did you have with your Equinox? I have had issues as well; two costly fixes later, and it currently seems OK.
It would lose accelleration on the highway, leaked constantly, head gaskets, and I forget what else. I got rid of it as the brakes and the accelleration issue and it wasn't safe at all. We made it through 12 years, but we usually keep our cars longer. Love the Jeep. No issues so far. I did get the extended warrenty after the equinox issues but never had to use it in 4 years.
Thanks. I said the same thing about it being a death trap bc the two failures happened without warning while driving and rendered it undrivable. I actually like how it drives and handles, when working...
Anonymous wrote:Jeeps are POS
Anonymous wrote:Even though they are owned by a European company, they are made in Ohio, OP. Some of us want US-made vehicles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^
Yikes. I didn’t realize I touched such a nerve. I feel like I see crvs and other cuvs getting towed all the time. I’ve spent a lot of time out west driving the highways.
Sorry for not giving your ignorance the proper deference. You may "feel like you see crvs and cuvs getting towed all the time" but you don't. In fact, most "cuvs" are too heavy for most class A RVs. You generally need a rear-engine diesel for those, and most of the RVs you see are gas with a Ford V8 in the chassis -- the same thing you would find in your basic pickup truck.
Just got done with traffic in the 495 bridge over the Potomac. Saw an rv towing a Chevy equinox.
My equinox was a death trap. It was determined to kill me. My jeep has been great.
It takes no more gas than a car or other SUV. And, how much you drive is equally important. You can be driving 1000 a month with a small car or 100-200 a month with a Jeep and you'd still have less enviromental impact with the Jeep. I don't get why people care what others drive.
Off topic, but what issues did you have with your Equinox? I have had issues as well; two costly fixes later, and it currently seems OK.
It would lose accelleration on the highway, leaked constantly, head gaskets, and I forget what else. I got rid of it as the brakes and the accelleration issue and it wasn't safe at all. We made it through 12 years, but we usually keep our cars longer. Love the Jeep. No issues so far. I did get the extended warrenty after the equinox issues but never had to use it in 4 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^
Yikes. I didn’t realize I touched such a nerve. I feel like I see crvs and other cuvs getting towed all the time. I’ve spent a lot of time out west driving the highways.
Sorry for not giving your ignorance the proper deference. You may "feel like you see crvs and cuvs getting towed all the time" but you don't. In fact, most "cuvs" are too heavy for most class A RVs. You generally need a rear-engine diesel for those, and most of the RVs you see are gas with a Ford V8 in the chassis -- the same thing you would find in your basic pickup truck.
Just got done with traffic in the 495 bridge over the Potomac. Saw an rv towing a Chevy equinox.
My equinox was a death trap. It was determined to kill me. My jeep has been great.
It takes no more gas than a car or other SUV. And, how much you drive is equally important. You can be driving 1000 a month with a small car or 100-200 a month with a Jeep and you'd still have less enviromental impact with the Jeep. I don't get why people care what others drive.
Off topic, but what issues did you have with your Equinox? I have had issues as well; two costly fixes later, and it currently seems OK.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ I see rvs rowing other cars all the time. How is jeep neutral different than regular neutral? In regular neutral the transmission isn’t engaged so the engine doesn’t spin when the wheels do. What am I missing?
Jeep made up propoganda
Do you design automatic transmissions? An automatic transmissions actively pumps fluid through the bearings. If the output shaft is turning without the input shaft turning, you can get oil starvation.
https://mechanics.stackexchange.com/questions/35720/flat-towing-in-neutral
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ I see rvs rowing other cars all the time. How is jeep neutral different than regular neutral? In regular neutral the transmission isn’t engaged so the engine doesn’t spin when the wheels do. What am I missing?
Jeep made up propoganda
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^
Yikes. I didn’t realize I touched such a nerve. I feel like I see crvs and other cuvs getting towed all the time. I’ve spent a lot of time out west driving the highways.
Sorry for not giving your ignorance the proper deference. You may "feel like you see crvs and cuvs getting towed all the time" but you don't. In fact, most "cuvs" are too heavy for most class A RVs. You generally need a rear-engine diesel for those, and most of the RVs you see are gas with a Ford V8 in the chassis -- the same thing you would find in your basic pickup truck.
Just got done with traffic in the 495 bridge over the Potomac. Saw an rv towing a Chevy equinox.
My equinox was a death trap. It was determined to kill me. My jeep has been great.
It takes no more gas than a car or other SUV. And, how much you drive is equally important. You can be driving 1000 a month with a small car or 100-200 a month with a Jeep and you'd still have less enviromental impact with the Jeep. I don't get why people care what others drive.