groucho wrote:
The CRD is not a fuel efficient vehicle. The Motori may be a fuel efficient engine but not necessarily in a Liberty box. Add a questionable transmission to the mix, 2 geared axles and a transfer case, ESP and cheap-labor programming code from New Delhi and there ya go.
Those who are looking for economy won't find it in the CRD. Those looking for breathtaking performance won't find it in the CRD. But it will likely take you anyplace you want when you want and it won't cost you an arm and a leg either to purchase or to fuel (relatively). I think the Motori in the right package would be very efficient.
Obviously, as fuel prices increase, the CRD's inefficiencies will become more apparent. I didn't buy my CRD thinking it would be fuel efficient. For a real 4x4, it is about the best mix of features, unless one wanted a pickup.
Not to split hairs, but NO SUV is fuel efficient. Not even the hybrids, unless you keep a hybrid strictly on surface roads and don't exceed 35 mph - when their tiny little briggs & stratton lawn mower engines kick in. Their economy ratings are based on mixed driving, not soley on battery or soley on gasoline power. In the real world, when you commute long distance on the interstate/freeway in a hybrid, it is the little tiny wind-up engine in it that is hauling it along, not the batteries, they are only supplementing the power - if at all - at those speeds.
You don't buy an SUV - ANY SUV - for it's fuel efficiency. Beacuse they (all of them) just are not fuel efficient. You are either looking for space to haul people or cargo, you are a suburban soccer mom who needs all the room to go to Target and Costco, OR you like to go off-road.
So the CRD is not a thrifty milage maxmizer, and it's not the biggest SUV, and it is not the fastest. What it DOES do, however, is give you the best milage for a decent size SUV where you still have more room than a car, enough ground clearance to traverse some bad weather and off-road stuff. It also doesn't make you a bunch of empty promises that the car companies do of their hybrids by assuring those of us that hold on to our cars for 6 or 7 years, that when the battery packs wear out and begin losing their ability to recharge, we wont be left holding the bag on $5000 to $8000 battery pack replacement bills cause they still aren't mass-produced enough (yet) to drive down cost to the end consumer.
Not a bad for proven diesel technology that has stood the test of time. So Chrysler messed up on some transmission, software and emissions stuff so that they could rush it to market - that's what you get for buying a domestic car. Sure, foreign cars have their trouble and get recalled too - but much, much, much less.
I like my CRD a lot, but my head isn't buried in the sand when it comes to who engineered the overall package

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'05 CRD, Midnight Blue. Every option. Nice ride, idles like a garbage truck
