Let the title say it all ! Lets hear it ! the reviews say cheap price is all it has going for it ! WHY
Thanks
HILLPPL:nerd:
Thanks
HILLPPL:nerd:
Only the second post you have on here, so you don't know alot about the platform. Therefore, I'll go easy on ya. But, you still have ALOT to learn.LOL; have any of you actually DRIVEN a Jeep Patriot?!! My wife has one (2009 Sport w/2.4 liter engine), and it's the BIGGEST piece of **** ever foisted upon the American motoring public!! What's wrong with it, you ask? Well, for starters, how about the headliner (AND, the hood shakes, too!), which vibrates LOUDLY against the steel roof at idle (loud enough to wake the dead!), and the only ways to get it to stop are to put your hand up against it, or place the trans in neutral. Or, the spare tire; the use of which causes the trans/engine to operate erratically, and all kinds of warning lights to come on in the instrument cluster. Or, the NUMEROUS reports on the Internet I've seen of suspension components, particularly ball joints, failing at very low mileages, like 30,000 - 40,000 miles, etc, etc, I could go on and on, but honestly, I've neither the time nor the energy to do so.
Anyone praising the Patriot reminds me of the Ford Mustang EcoBoost crowd, who're sure that NO MATTER WHAT, a Mustang GT (whose V-8 engine starts out, in base trim, with AT LEAST 100 more horsepower than the 2.3 liter turbo four) will NEVER be faster than their EcoBoost Mustangs, LOL!
Please see the signature of the poster directly above me!
POS edition? Well, your wife has had it for 8 model years, approaching its 9th. Must be fairly durable overall. If that's all the trouble she's had in 8 years, I don't think she's got a POS.I got yet another shower in my Patriot the last hard rain we had. That's why I give Patriots a bad rap. Oh, and read my signature too.
Roof leaked on 3rd day of ownership and multiple times thereafter. Wheel Speed Sensor FAILED (TWICE) causing ABS system to nearly kill me! Ball Joints FAILED @40k miles. Electronic Control Module FAILED - $750+ with towing and repairs! "Tire & Wheel Package" = 17" wheels with 16" donut spare - WTF?
No replacement for displacement.Anyone praising the Patriot reminds me of the Ford Mustang EcoBoost crowd, who're sure that NO MATTER WHAT, a Mustang GT (whose V-8 engine starts out, in base trim, with AT LEAST 100 more horsepower than the 2.3 liter turbo four) will NEVER be faster than their EcoBoost Mustangs, LOL!
Well Ignatz, good for you. But not all of us can afford a new car payment. Many of those issues occurred in the first 60,000 miles. There were many more issues not listed here. Nothing major in the last couple of years (knocks on wood). But the indoor dome light shower continues regularly. Believe me, if we could afford a new car payment we would. In the mean time I have to keep patching this POS together and keep it running.POS edition? Well, your wife has had it for 8 model years, approaching its 9th. Must be fairly durable overall. If that's all the trouble she's had in 8 years, I don't think she's got a POS.
I once had a lemon -- Jeep XJ. I bought it new and when I realized it was a lemon (6 months), it was gone.
Also had a bad set of tires on Wifey's old Wrangler -- Goodyear RT/Ss. Nobody I love was gonna ride on those.
If her Patriot is so awful, why have you let her drive it for 8 years? Its one thing to slam your finger in the door; its another to leave it there!
Well, that kinda figures. Newer vehicles don't usually break down.When i had my speedometer re-calibrated for the bigger tires, i got to talking to my Jeep Tech.
He said, we don't get many of the newer Pats in for service.
I thought about it, but why trade in a perfectly good running vehicle?IMO, for those with old clunky 1st gen Pats, trade up while you can still get them.
I see a lot of bumper stickers like "Silly boys, Jeeps are for GIRLS!" or "This is not my boyfriend's Jeep!" My Wife's driving a Patriot -- She liked mine.An aside, just an unscientific observation, seems most of these Pats i see on the road are driven by women.
Why are Pats a hit with the ladies?
My cousin and her husband always drive Hondas -- most recently bought a CRV even though it was small for them. They just drive Hondas, nothing else matters. Every company makes mistakes. They once had a Del Sol that wasn't very good to them and practically disintegrated in their driveway at only 120,000 miles. I thought about getting it as a project car because it seemed like it would be fun to drive once fixed up, but at the time, like you, I just didn't have the money to put into it. Ultimately it was towed away. :crying:Well Ignatz, good for you. But not all of us can afford a new car payment. Many of those issues occurred in the first 60,000 miles. There were many more issues not listed here. Nothing major in the last couple of years (knocks on wood). But the indoor dome light shower continues regularly. Believe me, if we could afford a new car payment we would. In the mean time I have to keep patching this POS together and keep it running.
And, btw, I drive it. The wife is smarter than me - she has a Honda.
:wink2:
I think one of the biggest issues with the Patriot when it comes to "professional" reviewers is that it sort of falls in the middle between the "cross-overs" (many of which have less than 7" of ground clearance and have no business doing even "light" off-roading) that are little more than high-roof station wagons and "true" hardcore off-road vehicles (i.e. Wrangler).Everyone covered it
The Jeep patriot is as good as other higher priced vehicles and cost much less. You're getting great value . Let people what they think about it, they're the ones that are ignorant and losing out on the great deal
I think you summed it up well and hit the nail on the head.I think one of the biggest issues with the Patriot when it comes to "professional" reviewers is that it sort of falls in the middle between the "cross-overs" (many of which have less than 7" of ground clearance and have no business doing even "light" off-roading) that are little more than high-roof station wagons and "true" hardcore off-road vehicles (i.e. Wrangler).
For the reviewers like consumer-reports, etc. that essentially set the Toyota Camry (or Highlander, or RAV4, or Honda Accord, or CRV, you get the picture) as their benchmark and try to see how other vehicles compare the Patriot is "unrefined", "rough", "noisy", and "handles poorly" (I think it handles pretty well for what it is, but again they're comparing it to cars with 6" of ground clearance, of course it doesn't corner as well), but they aren't comparing it to truly "like" vehicles even if they are "officially" in the same class.
On the other hand you have the off-road guys that are comparing it to a Wrangler Rubicon and complaining that it isn't as capable off-road (no s*** it doesn't have the capability of a $40k purpose-built off-roader).
The Patriot falls in a niche somewhere between these two extremes which makes it perfect for many people who need a vehicle with decent road handling, fuel economy, etc. and also need a vehicle that can handle some light off-roading and/or bad snow, but with reviewers often so slanted to one side of the coin or the other the Patriot doesn't get a fair shake.
I think one of the biggest issues with the Patriot when it comes to "professional" reviewers is that it sort of falls in the middle between the "cross-overs" (many of which have less than 7" of ground clearance and have no business doing even "light" off-roading) that are little more than high-roof station wagons and "true" hardcore off-road vehicles (i.e. Wrangler).
For the reviewers like consumer-reports, etc. that essentially set the Toyota Camry (or Highlander, or RAV4, or Honda Accord, or CRV, you get the picture) as their benchmark and try to see how other vehicles compare the Patriot is "unrefined", "rough", "noisy", and "handles poorly" (I think it handles pretty well for what it is, but again they're comparing it to cars with 6" of ground clearance, of course it doesn't corner as well), but they aren't comparing it to truly "like" vehicles even if they are "officially" in the same class.
On the other hand you have the off-road guys that are comparing it to a Wrangler Rubicon and complaining that it isn't as capable off-road (no s*** it doesn't have the capability of a $40k purpose-built off-roader).
The Patriot falls in a niche somewhere between these two extremes which makes it perfect for many people who need a vehicle with decent road handling, fuel economy, etc. and also need a vehicle that can handle some light off-roading and/or bad snow, but with reviewers often so slanted to one side of the coin or the other the Patriot doesn't get a fair shake.
well said. Well the patriot may not get a fair shake to most uninformed people, to those informed we drive a nice vehicle for less than what another company would charge . Great deal for sure and everything I desire, basic, simple, yet refined, classy looking, and nice to have the option go off the beaten track . Love the name as well, Patriot.I think you summed it up well and hit the nail on the head.
Pats are not slick bell 'n whistle foreign AWDs, not a race car, not a Wrangler and its less expensive than all of the above.
Yeah, i agree Pats fit in between all those categories, one of the reasons i like them.
Also agree some reviewers are slanted, maybe some even taking payola.
I occasionally catch an episode of Motor Week.
Most of the vehicles they review are born in foreign lands.
They do but not that often review domestic made vehicles.