Quartet of Jeep Concepts for 58th Easter Safari

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

For ages, Jeep has been using the fan-directed Easter Jeep Safari in Moab as an opportunity to show off working concepts to brand faithful. This year is no different, with four machines appearing on the slickrock.


First up is the Jeep Low Down, a callback to the Wrangler Lower 40 concept of fifteen years ago. Rolling at a stock ride height, some creative clearance work has made room for massive 42-inch BFGoodrich Krawler mud-terrains on 20-inch beadlock wheels. Stock Wrangler Rubicon 392 suspension bits remain intact. Those are custom carbon fender flares and eagle eyes will note the bumpers have been shortened. Like its Lower 40 inspiration, the concept is powered by a V8 engine, though this time around it uses the 392 mill making 475 horses underneath a Also transparent hood. The rear doors are notably bereft of handles.

Next is the Jeep Willys Dispatcher, getting a retro makeover with 36-inch tires and vintage style 16-inch wheels. A custom old-school front bumper houses a classic-looking Warn winch while the interior thumbs its nose to Health & Safety by binning the headrests like nature and the original Jeeps intended. The likes of an air compressor and vinyl floors are also found. This is a 4xe rigs, meaning 375 horses and 470 lb-ft of torque.

A new Gladiator High Top concept uses Jeep’s pickup truck as its base, painted in a natty Ginger Snap hue and riding on 40-inch BFGoodrich KO3 tires with 18-inch wheels. Concept fender flares appear again, and we find a Pentastar V6 under the hood. Slung underneath are Dana 60 front and rear axles with matching 5.38:1 gearing and an AccuAir adjustable air suspension to help make easy work of yer off-road excursions.

Finally, we have the Jeep Vacationer concept, billed as a premium SUV fitted with unique bodyside woodgrain graphics and spearmint paint which harken back to classic Wagoneer and Grand Wagoneer models. At each corner are 35-inch BFGoodrich mud-terrains wrapped around 18-inch Method racing wheels which provide a 1.5-inch lift, pairing well with larger wheel openings and custom bodyside flare extensions. 


Sure, its Skyloft gear is a flight of fancy but these other alterations are what Jeep should seriously look at offering if they wish to juice flagging Wagoneer sales. There’s no reason the model can’t play both sides of the ledger, offered as an off-roader like this for the moneyed set and a slick executive express to take on the Escalade. That’s the approach Lexus is taking with the new GX with its Overtrail vs Luxury+ trims.


[Images: Jeep]


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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

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  • Oberkanone Oberkanone on Mar 25, 2024

    New York Auto Show is this week. Anything new from Jeep? From Stellantis?

  • MaintenanceCosts MaintenanceCosts on Mar 26, 2024

    Wow, they're going all-in on the ugly mint green. The more Jeeps get released, the more certain I am that I'm just not a Jeep person.

  • FreedMike Not my favorite car design, but that blue color is outstanding.
  • Lorenzo Car racing is dying, and with it my interest. Midget/micro racing was my last interest in car racing, and now sanctioning body bureaucrats are killing it off too. The more organized it is, the less interesting it becomes.
  • Lorenzo Soon, the rental car lots will be filled with Kia's as far as the eye can see!
  • Lorenzo You can't sell an old man's car to a young man, but you CAN sell a young man's car to an old man (pardon the sexism, it's not my quote).Solution: Young man styling, but old man amenities, hidden if necessary, like easier entry/exit (young men gradually turn into old men, and will appreciate them).
  • Wjtinfwb Hmmm. Given that most Ford designs are doing relatively well in the marketplace, if this was forced I'd bet it was over the S650 Mustang. It's not a bad looking car but some angles seem very derivative of other makes, never a good trait for a car as distinctive as Mustang. And if he had anything to do with the abysmal dashboard, that's reason enough. Mustang doesn't need the "Tokyo by Night" dash arrangement of a more boring car. Analog gauges, a screen big enough for GPS, not Netflix and some decent quality plastics is plenty. The current set-up would be enough to dissuade me from considering a new Mustang.
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