Sorry Matt but unless the "Trail Rated" badge came off in the wreck I think it's a QT1. :(
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Sorry Matt but unless the "Trail Rated" badge came off in the wreck I think it's a QT1. :(
LOL, someone tell them to get on this site. They could part it out and get a few bucks. I'd like the rear axles, t case (as a back up), trans (back up), and def the little lights behind the climate controls. Mine have never worked.
Damn! That sucks, thats the second XK thats been totalled lately, but very impressive each time I see one in an accident the people are ok..
And THIS... is why I'm fixing up a RAMCHARGER! At least it's PAID FOR (unlike my Jeep!)... almost... :p
Glad my jeep is paid for. Lol
The way sinkholes are opening up all over the world, the next thing is one will swallow a Commander.
Jeep quit making them, so everyone needs to be more careful. They're like Picasso paintings: once they're gone, there's no more.
And you guys wanting to snatch the QDII axle out from under it while it's still sitting in the snow. LOL!!
Found the story to go with the picture:
Sounds like it was QT1, stock, and had some bad driving by a person new to wheeling.Quote:
Here's the story of the Commander. This was the owner's second trip out. They smartly opted out of the Red Elephant Hill Trail and met us at Bill Moore Lake, along with two other rigs. At one point early on when he was not getting traction, I asked whether he was in 1st gear, and he indicated he had no gear or transfercase selection since it was AWD. He struggled up most of the trail, and was, in fact, pulled a large portion of the way by the little 4-cylinder Toyota pickup with a rear locker, pictured earlier. Go Yota! The transmission was overheating. We talked the gentleman into parking the Commander; he rode with the Toyota owner, and the passenger rode with me. We completed the loop and returned to the Commander. The 14 rigs continued our decent and then heard through the CB that the Commander rolled. I was about 6 rigs ahead, and there were a number of rigs behind, but only 1 saw it happen.
Fortunately, the driver and passenger were OK; albeit shaken up. After we checked things over, they opted to continue down to the bottom, where insurance could assess the vehicle. My understanding of what happened is that they could not get geared low enough, started to break free, and the owner, by his own words pulled the e-brake to stop, which whipped him sideways into the roll. The really unfortunate thing is that this is the owner and his wife's ONLY vehicle.
I've noticed in the trips that I've taken here in Colorado that a large number of people here think that because they have 4WD (in this case AWD), they are automatically qualified to a) take their rig offroad, and b) take it up and down the flippin' Rockies. There is very little caution, planning, and experience on the part of a lot of the wheelers out here. I don't know if he really had no input on the gearing and/or offroad modes of the vehicle, or simply didn't understand it. He probably shouldn't have had the Commander on the trail in this situation, and the trail leaders should probably have warned against it.
I agree Justin
Me too!
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