The Jeep Wrangler Sends the V8 Off With a Bang

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

Back in the early 1990s, when I was in high school, a friend’s dad owned an off-road parts distribution company, and we had a ton of fun with his Chevy big block-swapped Jeep CJ. I specifically remember shredding the driveshaft on at least three Tennessee backwoods trails. Modified Jeeps are nothing new, but the automaker is jumping into the fray with a send-off model to honor the rowdy V8 it offered for the SUV’s last few model years.


The Jeep Wrangler 392 Final Edition brings a close to the automaker’s eight-cylinder efforts, but at a cost. Loaded down with almost every option available, the new Wrangler will cost around $102,000 to start. That said, the price tag buys not only the Jeep, but a serious tool kit, a Warn winch, and more.


Under the hood, the 6.4-liter Hemi remains the star of the show. It produces 470 horsepower and 470 pound-feet of torque, and sends it to all four wheels through an eight-speed transmission. Jeep claims a 4.5-second 0-60 mph time, which would be terrifying in a Wrangler, but the bigger admission here is the torque number, which makes the 392 a formidable powertrain off-road.


While those acceleration numbers in a Wrangler on the highway could be terrifying, almost 75 percent of the torque is available from just above idle. That makes rock crawling and climbing tough terrain much less of a hassle, and the 2.72 low-range gear ratio helps crank the SUV over exceedingly difficult obstacles.


Jeep also includes a 35-inch tire package, acoustically-insulated glass, and the Wrangler’s first power seats. The SUV’s interior is massively improved for the 2024 model year, with a new look, better tech, and revised styling.


This might be the V8 Wrangler’s last year on sale, but Jeep will continue selling the plug-in hybrid Wrangler 4xe, and an all-electric Wrangler is expected soon. At the same time, the gas-powered Wrangler is available in a range of configurations in 2024, including with a V6 or turbocharged inline-four.


[Image: Stellantis/Jeep]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • MrIcky MrIcky on Mar 21, 2024

    I've said it before and I'll say it again, everyone makes assumptions about these because they've seen one in a mall. Go to S. Utah and Nevada and you'll see a bunch of these, very popular-and they get used off road. I've met people with these who have done big chunks of the BDR routes in Oregon, Washington, and Idaho. No I don't think all of them go off roading beyond driving on the beach- but there are a lot of 392s that aren't mall-crawlers.

  • Michael Del Rosso Michael Del Rosso on Apr 11, 2024

    Just remember To pack an extra hundred gallons of gas for the trip..

  • Slavuta I feel about it same as I feel about requirement to keep your gun in a safe
  • EBFlex This is just an avenue to track people. The state needs to be nuked.
  • FreedMike I'm cool with something in my nav screen or gauge cluster notifying me of the speed limit. Mandated limits? Automated slowdowns? Nope.
  • Kjhkjlhkjhkljh kljhjkhjklhkjh if your going more than 10 mph over for any length of time beyond passing, you are putting everyone at risk and it should be loud as hell and and constant. if you are going more than 20 over any more than 20 seconds it should notify law enforcement and your insurance company. a whole bunch of people are about to scream at me that ''it might be an emergency'' ... i get that but you going 20 or more over .. now YOU are the hazard that can kill a family.
  • Jalop1991 first he has to define "affordable".He hasn't, so he can later say that means whatever he wants.It's like the law: you can't just make a law without first defining your terms carefully and completely. Otherwise, it's meaningless.Just like this announcement of Ford's.
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