Feeling the Pinch: Jeep Recalls 338k SUVs

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

In a new recall, some members of the Grand Cherokee family will require a dealership visit to sort out a problem with upper control arm pinch bolts which may have been damaged during vehicle assembly.

According to the company, approximately a quarter million Grand Cherokee L models from the 2021 – 2023 model years and roughly a further 88,000 standard-length Grand Cherokee SUVs assembled for the ’22 and ’23 model years are the target of this recall. It is suggested that only 1 percent of this number have the problem but, as will most campaigns of this type, they’re summoning all of them back to a service bay for checkups.


At issue is the amount of torque hammered into the aforementioned pinch bolts during assembly of these vehicles. Jeep says they combed through “vehicle production torque records” to identify a time period in which this was a problem, proving that car companies have way more data points available to them than they will ever admit. 


Torqueing procedures were apparently updated in May of last year, explaining why the problem suddenly vanished. Jeep also notes that similar vehicles not included in the recall were built at a different plant which had a “more robust torque strategy”. This author has decided to adopt that turn of phrase the next time he does a better job of twisting the cap on something like a bottle of Pepsi or jar of Kraft extra-crunchy peanut butter


For anyone keeping score, Jeeps claims to have shifted a total of 244,594 units of the Grand Cherokee last year alone. This is an entire 38 percent of the brand’s sales and stands in contrast to the 156,581 Wranglers (the brand’s next-best seller) which found homes last year. Combined, the Wagoneer and Grand Wagoneer sold less than 40,000 examples. 


The company says that, as of January this year, it is not aware of any incidents or injuries potentially related to this issue for all markets.


[Image: 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.

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  • The Oracle The Oracle on Mar 04, 2024

    Great, Jeep continues to push poor quality products on its customers.

  • ToolGuy ToolGuy on Mar 05, 2024

    Mopar Story Time: Youngest kid visited this past weekend and her 2010 Jeep Liberty was kind enough to stumble and throw a code just 1/2 mile from home as she was leaving (good job, Liberty! are we bonding now?). I grabbed the scanner and 'the book' (one of those "composition books" that has dates/mileage/maintenance notes, in theory) and we sat down to do some ciphering (but quickly, because she has places to go and things to do, now using spouse's vehicle).

    P0301, misfire cylinder 1 (misfire count 170! in a short time). Freeze Frame data corroborated the human's story, but much more precisely (28 mph, 29.4% throttle position). Just the one code (Yes!).

    What causes a misfire, but specific to one cylinder? (The coils are shared two cylinders to a coil.) There is a history of intermittent misfires with this vehicle, but trivial misfire counts and that was cylinder 2 (last time cylinder 1 registered a misfire was 4-5 years ago).

    Spouse says cylinder 1 spark plug is fouled or shorted (spoiler: checked it later, clean).

    I was curious to see the spark plug, but the Short Term Fuel Trim Bank 1 number on the Freeze Frame data was stuck in my mind: 18.8% (I like to see it under 3%). The engine computer was sending extra fuel to Bank 1 (cylinders 1/3/5) during the misfire event. 210K miles. Have we ever changed the injectors? (picture old man looking up to scan memory bank, coming up empty)

    Well my uncle the Automotive Diagnostic Genius (and Electrical Engineer) says "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." So I immediately ordered six fuel injectors, and six spark plugs, and six wires and three boots, and... three ignition coils (hesitated there but went for it). And then ordered a new compression tester because mine dates back to when I was 17. And a new '40K' air filter just because.

    Three weeks until the next vehicle swap. The last additive round seems to have 'cured' the oil consumption issue for now. The new tires get rave reviews and are wearing evenly.

    • See 3 previous
    • ToolGuy ToolGuy on Mar 06, 2024

      I went from Phoenix, Arizona

      All the way to Tacoma

      Philadelphia, Atlanta, L.A.

  • Jeff I would choose the Versa with a 5 speed manual. Versa pros are a 4 cylinder motor and available 5 speed manual. The advantages of the MIrage would be available hatchback and slightly better mpgs. Sarah N Tune did a recent review of the Versa which was positive saying it was mechanically simple, easy to work on, and fun to drive but even she said it would be better with a manual.
  • Jeff Its also less expensive to paint cars white and gray. I had a truck repainted 4 years ago and white was the least expensive color. Saves the car manufactures money to limit color choice and have less colors available during manufacturing. Also the dealers are the manufacturers customers and white, silver, and gray are neutral and easier to sell. My Maverick is Area 51 which is a medium blue. Ford has eliminated that color along with orange and has replaced it with a light gray. Any color besides gray, white, and black costs more. Everything is about reducing costs and a little bit saved over 100k units or more a year adds up. This is true as well for most vehicles having black or gray interiors.
  • MaintenanceCosts A lot of people don't want to attract attention. Unless it is immaculately detailed, a white/gray/black car will fade into the background, which is what a lot of people want.
  • VoGhost The back seat of the Versa is surprisingly large (for two).
  • Dwford When you buy a car they charge extra for the cool colors. But when you go to trade the car in the salesman tells you it’s worth less because no one wants that crazy color. That and people are sheep and don’t want to have to defend their color choice from mouthy friends and family. Easier to just buy gray
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