Oh, I agree that adding a different gear would be a pricey proposition. But since we're talking about cost, you have to consider the price of buying another vehicle and paying for the cost of taxes, title, and insurance on a yearly basis. When I bought the CRD, I was single and I intended it to be my do-it-all vehicle. I thought it would be something that had the potential to get 30 mpg highway and therefore would be an acceptable vehicle for a 20 mile commute to work. Rather than own a separate truck for hauling things for the house I just bought, I figured I'd find a utility trailer so that I could have a miniature tractor/trailer combination. I also wanted something 4-wheel drive since it snows an appreciable amount here, and I attest that the ESP works very nicely.
Since I bought the Jeep, I've bought a house, I've gotten married, I have a daughter on the way, and I can't exactly afford to add a third car at this point. My wife's vehicle brought to the marriage is a 2006 Suzuki Grand Vitara...talk about underpowered and poor fuel mileage. Unfortunately, both are too new and have too much negative equity at this point, so a trade-in isn't exactly and option at this point. I've perused the auto listings and you just don't find a VW TDI in this area for a low price that isn't already very old and/or ragged out. When I bought the CRD, I also expected to keep it for a very long time and with the price of diesel, a couple of MPGs better would pay off over the long term. One could also argue that making the engine turn fewer revs would also add to the longevity. CRD owners often remark that they get their best economy when they keep the tach under 2000 RPM. At 70 mph, my tach reads 2050...my speedo reads about 2 mph too high. I generally see about 27 mpg at 70-75 mph and 28-30 at 60 mph. It would seem that the best way to get a taller gear would be to simply change the gear instead of spending the money to put on bigger tires and a lift to accommodate them....it's not like this is necessarily inexpensive either. The aero issue is a whole other debate...doing the lift probably increases the drag...changing a gear doesn't.
If I was serious about adding new gears, I'd go to a junk yard and find wrecked Libby with a manual (see Wikipedia link below). Going "used" would probably be the most economical route to go. I still wonder if there would be a problem for our ESP equipped Libby's. I did wonder about what one could do about the shift points and recalibrating the speedo.
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Jeep_Liberty/Gearing
These two links are actually from the above Wikipedia page, they could be interesting to play around with.
http://www.novak-adapt.com/knowledge/gearing.htm ...tests gearing scenarios
http://www.4lo.com/calc/geartable.htm ...relates tires sizes and economy
Thanks for the nice discussion thusfar....