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 Post subject: Thinking about buying a CRD
PostPosted: Sun Mar 11, 2007 1:22 pm 
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Thinking about buying a CRD Liberty to replace my 96 Dodge 2500 CTD. Due to a recent job change I no longer need a 2500 truck and want to stay with a diesel and would like something a little smaller. I think my choices are limited to the Liberty CRD as I know of no other smaller diesels out there that can tow. Will a Liberty CRD pull my 3500lb boat without eating a tranny? Do they have enough space to pack up a weekend worth of stuff to go to the cabin for a family of four? Should I go with a 05 or the 06? Would you get a limited to get the limited slip rear diff.? Are these little diesels problematic and something to stay away from? I have been lurking here for a while and have been seaching the posts but still have questions. This site seems to have the most information on these little guys so I am looking for some honst feedback. Thanks in advance, Saggys. :D


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 11, 2007 1:40 pm 
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I dont know, I have kinda mixed feelings about it. Its got a nice engine and a crappy tranny. You might want to read through some topics in this forum to get an idea what the common problems are. As to the boat, it will definitely pull 3500lb. I've got a 19' caravelle and its a dream to pull :-). My dad got a 24' Caravelle Interceptor and although its very heavy I think its still able to pull it, braking is a different story.

This John Deere tractor trailer is probably the heaviest I have ever pulled.

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PostPosted: Sun Mar 11, 2007 3:17 pm 
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Although I L.O.S.T. an engine, the engine seems to be good. With the MAF unplugged (which basically deactivates the EGR), the CRD runs like a diesel is supposed to run. The tranny seems to be good but the TC is weak...an aftermarket TC will probably be the eventual fix for this. I have an August 2005 build date on a 2006 and have had no tranny/TC problems as of 16,000 miles. I have a feeling that the MAF unplugged helps the tranny a bit too. The other issue seems to be with fueling and air leaks. The Fuel Filter Housing has some issues but I think we will get that remedied also.

If you get a 2006 you will get the full ESP package and no "limited slip". You won"t need it with the traction control that is on the 2006. Either way (2005 or 2006), as long as you know the few issues above, I think you will like the CRD. Like you said earlier...there is really nothing like the Jeep Liberty CRD out there right now! As for MPG, I get a steady 20mpg city (winter) and 25mpg hwy (winter at 70 mph). I get a bit better in the summer. I think both of these numbers will be a bit better this year with the MAF disconnect and possible TC upgrade.

To travel with Four Adults and thier "gear", you can add a roof basket or hitch basket for extra room. Pulling seems not to be a problem for anyone here to date. Of course, you could cough up $40,000 +/- for the 2008 Jeep Grand Cherokee CRD... :P ...but a good used Liberty CRD seems to be a better buy even with the few known glitches.

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PostPosted: Sun Mar 11, 2007 4:43 pm 
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I have a '05 Sport with LSD. Have had virtually zero problems with it, and tow all the time. Tows awesome, great mpg while doing it. Love this rig, works as well as I hoped it would.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Sun Mar 11, 2007 4:57 pm 
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HI,

I can't speak for any towing needs, however i might be able to shed some light on packing for a family of four. I have two small kids ages 8 and 10. I keep a small box of "essentials" in the cargo area. [tow rope, jumper cables, small electric air pump, for the winter a small shovel and a half filled 5 gal pail of salt/sand mix.] That leaves little room for much else.

I am most disappointed in the cargo area for the size of the vehicle. I think the use of space is not very efficient.

If you pack well and as Darby said use the roof rack for anything that can get wet, you should be O.K.

FOr my 2 cents on which year, I bought an '06 and tried to get as late a build date as I could. FWIW.

BTW, are you selling the Cummins outright? I just might buy it from you if you are close enough to me. :roll: I am looking for a 12 valve, short wheelbase, extra cab to turn into a middle aged guy's hot rod of sorts.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Sun Mar 11, 2007 11:46 pm 
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I love my Libby, it has been great and virtually trouble free. I recommend anyone buying one to avoid 05 models and get one built LATE in the 06 model year.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Sun Mar 11, 2007 11:46 pm 
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If you know anything about diesels, don't do it. It's just a cheap thrown together machine that does two things well, Heats great and Good 4wd. Everything else is below grade IMHO. Wait for something better, the flood gate is about to open as this rig will be forgotten in 2-3years.....

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 12:47 am 
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Kellog13 wrote:
If you know anything about diesels, don't do it. It's just a cheap thrown together machine that does two things well, Heats great and Good 4wd. Everything else is below grade IMHO. Wait for something better, the flood gate is about to open as this rig will be forgotten in 2-3years.....


The only thing that is "below grade" is the torque converter. The 2.8 liter VM Motori engine is a great motor with a proven service record in Europe, and the CRD in the family has had 10k miles and zero issues. There are a few problematic CRDs out there, I will admit, but most haven't had the kind of teething troubles that those few have had.

Short of the VW Tiguan soft-roader (think RAV4 with VW reliability) there are no upcoming alternatives within the next few years in the North American market. Ford may come out with a diesel Expedition in 2009-10, but that will be a big thirsty beast compared to the CRDs.

In short -- if you find a good CRD with a service history that doesn't include a lot of issues -- buy it!

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And: 1995 Grand Cherokee 4.0 Laredo, Silver, Selec-Trac, custom free-flow exhaust by local shop.

Me: 1998 Subaru Outback AWD, 2.5 DOHC, 5-speed manual. Nearly 170k miles & runs awesome.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 12:49 am 
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I wouldn't pay a "premium" price for one if I was buying. I would also look for an 05 instead of an 06 for a much better warranty. 7/70 for 05 and 3/36 for an 06. They have some issues, same as anything else. I would be more concerned with your dealer knowledge of the crd. The torque converter saga is something worth reading about. Lots of info here. Also people here that have sold or have lemon lawed their crd and come back to bash it. I would buy it again.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 12:52 am 
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onthehunt wrote:
I wouldn't pay a "premium" price for one if I was buying. I would also look for an 05 instead of an 06 for a much better warranty. 7/70 for 05 and 3/36 for an 06. They have some issues, same as anything else. I would be more concerned with your dealer knowledge of the crd. The torque converter saga is something worth reading about. Lots of info here. Also people here that have sold or have lemon lawed their crd and come back to bash it. I would buy it again.


Very true. I forgot to mention -- if at all possible -- take the CRD to a Jeep dealer that is paired with a Dodge dealer that does a lot of business with the Cummins-powered pickups and has a lot of extant diesel knowledge in the shop.

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The folks: 2006 Liberty CRD Limited, Lt. Khaki (picked up 7/21/06 w/ 300 miles). Rotella 5W-40.

And: 1995 Grand Cherokee 4.0 Laredo, Silver, Selec-Trac, custom free-flow exhaust by local shop.

Me: 1998 Subaru Outback AWD, 2.5 DOHC, 5-speed manual. Nearly 170k miles & runs awesome.


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 Post subject: Below Grade Parts-- things to replace/repair
PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 2:13 am 
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offroadsubaru wrote:

The only thing that is "below grade" is the torque converter. The 2.8 liter VM Motori engine is a great motor with a proven service record in Europe, and the CRD in the family has had 10k miles and zero issues. There are a few problematic CRDs out there, I will admit, but most haven't had the kind of teething troubles that those few have had.

In short -- if you find a good CRD with a service history that doesn't include a lot of issues -- buy it!


I like my CRD, and the engine rocks. It is an interesting vehicle and you should consider it something that may take time and effort to keep in good order. It is more like a Range Rover in that it will require lots of $ and time to keep it running right. Think plane, boat or other motorized hobby. I can't see this as something totally trouble or worry free until you replace the troublesome sub-par parts it comes with.


Here are some of the sub-par materials you can look forward to replacing or constantly tinkering with:

1. Torque Converter: made of cheap materials and not speced for a diesel.

2. Transmission pump: The pump seal had leak issues, so it was redesigned and other changes made. This is not a recall item, you may get the new pump with the F37 customer satisfaction service-- depending on if the dealer feels like it. Otherwise, you must buy it once warranty is over.

3. EGR Valve: Failures quite common as the valve was not designed with LSD in mind. This has been redesigned, but not recalled. If you have the old one and you get past warranty-- you get to buy the new redesign when the old one finally goes out. The new fuel is helping these last longer, so it should not be a reoccuring issue. You can also take it apart and clean it and put it back together to help prevent it from sooting up and binding... or you can not use it. I am not advocating law-bending of course, but it is a theoretical option.

4. Fuel System leaks: It is highly likely to suck air into the line. Some fuel line parts have been redesigned, but also not recalled as of yet. The factory fuel filter unit leaks and is subject to heat warp problems as it is made of cheap plastic. The assembly reminds me of the innards of a cheap coffee maker you get at wall-mart. People on this forum are working on solving the fuel filter assembly leak-- either my beefing it up or replacing it entirely. Once your fuel system starts leaking you may experience "bucking", a shivering hesitation, and/or a loss of power. You will have to burp the air out to get it to stop. I am doing mine on almost a daily basis (well, I drive 100 miles a day-- so maybe not quite that often). I now carry a 11mm wrench and some bleeder line in the glove box for just this purpose. Worse case, it starts leaking through the fuel heater switch, the switch comes on and burns your CRD to the ground. Of course, that may be the best case if your fully insured and sick of it.

4. EGR Flow control valve: first parts consisted of plastic gearing that jammed, the newer parts are better made. If the valve has not been replaced and makes it past warranty-- you get to buy the new valve, this is not a recalled part either.

5. D30a front diff: Subject to blowing if you wheel it. May replace under warranty if they feel like being real nice to you. This is common for all Liberty's. The diff case will stress fracture if repeatedly shock loaded (spin the wheels freely and then they suddenly grip). There is a "collar" to help keep the case together in the event of this happening, but it does not fit the CRD due to clearance issues.

6. F37 flash to fix Torque Converter-- deprograms engine torque and horsepower to make the torque converter last. There is no way for your dealer to "undo" it once done. It is a mandatory part of F37 and they will likely do the flash if you ever take your CRD in for any service related to the computer system. Better to get it done to any vehicle you buy so you are making your performance judgment on what the vehicle will actually handle like after DC gets their hands on its computer.

7. Ball Joints: So far, two recalls on Liberty ball joints. Unknown how much longer you can expect the new ball joints to last . Better factor in the cost of new ones every 30-50 thousand miles or so. This problem is common to all Liberties, gas or diesel.

8. CCV blows oil into the CAC. You can open vent it (illegal) or buy a provent gizmo to keep the oil out of your intake. Or live with the oil and whatever it does to your engine.

9. CAC line: Redesigned. The old one is orange on the inside. It becomes soft when it gets all the oil blown from the CCV in it. The new one is black on the inside and holds up better when oil saturated. If you don't get this replaced under warranty, you get to buy it too-- not a recall.

9. Goodyear SRA's: The stock tires are crap. They ride horrible. They wear fast and the traction is subpar. Most any stock tire is junk, though.

10. Air sensor on manifold clogs with EGR soot and oil passed in from the CCV: You get to clean this every oil change or your gas mileage and responsiveness goes down.

11. Air intake: It is too small and sucks direct from the front of the vehicle. It will take in water and saturate the filter causing oil to blow by the turbo seals in rainy conditions. Not everyone has this problem, but some have. A common solution is to buy an air box for a gasser and put it on (which has a snorkel to pull air higher and from the side and does not saturate the filter).

12. Blower motor (heater/ac fan): Just got recalled. May cause a vehicle fire.

13. Muffler. It is the same muffler they put on the gasser and is necked down and restricts flow. If yours has the stock muffler, you will want to replace it too.

14. Computer bridge: The ECM, PCM and TCM data bus does not meet industry specifications. Two or more of the computers think they are the "bus" master. This trickery is done by time-slicing the access to the bus between the two different computers. The software hack makes them both think they are the bus master because only they can see the bus at any given time. Because of this kludge, ODBII scanners won't work properly-- they will loose half the data feed when one of the computers is time-sliced (put to sleep) on the bus. A previous flash, F-31 I think, caused this problem to rear its head is such as way as to make this fail federal emissions requirements because the OBDII port would not work at all with federal emissions equipment.

15. Door seals: All door seals on liberties are prone to wind leaks. Make sure you check this if this will bother you or a significant other.

I think this is most of it. Do realize that if you need anything more than an oil filter for a CRD specific part-- you can expect to wait a week or more. Every part on this thing is either back-ordered or comes from another country. If you drive this daily and don't have a backup-- then plan on getting a rental car or the "max care" extended warranty which will get you a rental car. If you don't do the max care-- it is up to the dealer if you get a rental in many cases. If this thing throws a CEL in the middle of nowhere and dies-- you can expect the dealer to have it for awhile while they wait for parts. Consider this if you are going to travel across country with it. Also consider that many dealers don't want anything to do with it.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 7:06 pm 
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Holy smokes,I think you scared me away! :( What is the deal these days, can't anyone make a decent diesel? I am not all that thrilled with my 96 Cummins either as it is in the dealership getting the Vacuum pump rebuilt for the 4th time in 6 months! The best diesels I have had were the 2 first gen Cummins (92 & 93) They were very trouble free and simple. However they do not come in a 4 door version. That is a very extensive list and I thank you for your time. This almost makes me want to go back to a gasser. You would think after spending $20,000+ on a vehicle you could drive it trouble free for a couple of years with only doing routine maintenance. My wife has 120,000 on a 1999 Chev Tracker and all I have done is oil and air filter changes,tires, front bakes a O2 sensor and spark plugs, that's it! and this is a throw away vehicle.


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PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 7:16 pm 
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The diesel is great - Chrysler cut corners in the install.
Pablo's list includes things that are all Liberty's - Ball Joints, D30A (I have the collar on it), cheap goodyears, blower motor , door seals.
and everytime we've had a poll about 2/3's of the folks haven't had a problem - that doesn't mean you can buy one and ignore it , you do need to be willing to work on it.

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PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 7:45 pm 
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I second that if you look down just a bit that about 72% on the last poll said they loved it, it was a very simple poll and needs to be redone, but should be at least 50% accurate.

K

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 11:36 pm 
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saggys wrote:
Holy smokes,I think you scared me away! :( What is the deal these days, can't anyone make a decent diesel? I am not all that thrilled with my 96 Cummins either as it is in the dealership getting the Vacuum pump rebuilt for the 4th time in 6 months! The best diesels I have had were the 2 first gen Cummins (92 & 93) They were very trouble free and simple. However they do not come in a 4 door version. That is a very extensive list and I thank you for your time. This almost makes me want to go back to a gasser. You would think after spending $20,000+ on a vehicle you could drive it trouble free for a couple of years with only doing routine maintenance. My wife has 120,000 on a 1999 Chev Tracker and all I have done is oil and air filter changes,tires, front bakes a O2 sensor and spark plugs, that's it! and this is a throw away vehicle.

Don't let them scare you, I've run mine for over 15,000 miles so far and have yet to hit an issue(06 Sport). In fact according to my gf's father(Chrysler engineer for 30+ years) the CRD is so far proving to be one of their most reliable vehicles in years, although its new enough that we definatly do not have long haul numbers.

While some members have certainly had issues, the simple fact is that they are in a very very small minority, and if you visit the forums for any vehicle you'll find a subset of the population that can tell you why that vehicle is terrible. After all, most people who never have a problem don't bother to seek help online, but those who do have problems and aren't satisfied with dealer assistance are much more likely to wander onto forums like this.

Not discounting anyone's personal bad experience, but lets just keep some perspective. Its a great little vehicle, not perfect, but not a Ford Pinto or something either.

Given the needs listed in the first post, I think it would be ideal for all but the space concerns, where it is definatly limited when it comes to that many people. A roof container of some sort may solve that, but I don't know how much you consider typical for your needs. Some people I know seem to go 'camping' by taking their whole house on the road, for me it always meant a tent and a guide to making fire with sticks...

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 12:48 am 
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http://www.rangerovers.net/rrmkiiiremedies.html

http://www.rangerovers.net/newrremedies.htm

Check out problems with modern Range Rovers (including diesels) for some good perspective. Even the bad CRDs seem good compared to the world's original luxury SUV brand.

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The folks: 2006 Liberty CRD Limited, Lt. Khaki (picked up 7/21/06 w/ 300 miles). Rotella 5W-40.

And: 1995 Grand Cherokee 4.0 Laredo, Silver, Selec-Trac, custom free-flow exhaust by local shop.

Me: 1998 Subaru Outback AWD, 2.5 DOHC, 5-speed manual. Nearly 170k miles & runs awesome.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 10:17 am 
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offroadsubaru wrote:
Check out problems with modern Range Rovers (including diesels) for some good perspective. Even the bad CRDs seem good compared to the world's original luxury SUV brand.


Suddenly, I'm feeling down right blessed.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 11:10 am 
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I've had minimal problems with mine (glow plugs, and 1 EGR valve) but I accepted that when I purchased a brand new engine in a different vehicle.

I actually like mine, but am worried that Jeep will forget about this model in a few years and leave us high and dry.

As for towing, I've towed probably about 5000 miles pulling my 18ft trailer with various vehicles on it. This past weekend pulling a newly acquired 86 Mustang I got around 20mpg (see pics of your rigs thread).

I wouldn't be scared in buying one, just do your research and educate yourself before diving in.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 11:22 am 
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Well, Mercedes is now listed as DEAD LAST in quality behind Land Rover, ect. They said you would less problems with an eight year old Lexus than a brand new Mercedes... :oops:

As reported on AOL Best to Worst...I think 36 car lines are listed

At least we KNOW the issues with our CRDs and pretty much able to figure out a fix or possible solution.

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PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 11:31 am 
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I have been very happy with mine and I traded a 2003 Cummins Dodge for it.

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