- First Name
- Mark
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2020
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 440
- Reaction score
- 1,021
- Location
- South Carolina
- Vehicle(s)
- 2023 Bronco
- Your Bronco Model
- Big Bend
- Thread starter
- #31
Looks like your timestamp and build could be a late summer product. Has your dealer given you any hope?So I drove a Defender 90 Friday night for comparison, and then attended the Crossroads event Saturday. Here is my takeaway:
The defender 90 is fairly plain and utilitarian inside as well. Appointed materials a little nicer, but plain. I can’t get past the “gone mall crawler” feel, which starts up front with the dash mounted automatic gear shit joy stick. It is wider, and the rear seats have more leg room and recline, at the cost of cargo space. And driving in airlifted settings is like riding on concrete. Oh and wind noise (at least with the optional snorkel).
The Bronco:
Very much the size of my Jeep JKU. If you can’t see a Bronco, go test drive a Wrangler four door. Same effective size.
If anything I think the new - post 2012 grand Cherokee like - Wrangler interior is nicer than the Bronco’s, and the Bronco is somewhere between that and the original more utilitarian JK and Toyota FJ interiors. To me this is good. A lot of fun has been poked at the “luxury” JK / JL dashes, these being rugged off road vehicles. The finish on the Bronco is nice though - even the Big Bend. And I really like the switch locations vs the Jeep. Like both sized sync screens too. I hate the gauge cluster though - clearly for the smartphone / tablet fans out there over traditional gauge clusters. I’m not sure if they though just having a speedo harkens back to the EB, but not having that balance of information between speedo and tach really sucks.
Manual shifter feel is good. Not as direct as my JK / still cabley, but good and I can’t wait to drive it.
Engine compartments: both 2.3 and 2.7 have way more space and tidiness under the hood than the pics we’ve seen show. There is room for an ARB compressor, and a catch can. Looked finished enough without the stupid plastic cover.
I was bummed no Squatch or Badlands, so it’s a let down looking at Sahara’s and Sports when you want to see the beef. Axle to frame was about 5-1/2 to 6”. The seam between the rocker and the door (on the exterior side) was about 20”. The guy said the Badlands is about an inch higher, and the Squatch an inch or so higher than that. The same measurement on my Jeep is 24-1/2”, so these Broncos felt low.
Front seats were very OBackseat is nice. I am 6’-2” so my head is up between the roll cage. With the top down or off the Bronco is amazingly open compare to my JK. The rear seats do have three recline positions. They will stay in the furthest reclined position in my view.
Towing - I said this in the towing controller thread. I am alarmingly underwhelmed by the hitch receiver. I haven’t looked at the JLs, but the one rated for 3500 lbs on my JK is easily 20% bigger in all dimensions. Maybe the JK’s is overbuilt. Maybe the Bronco’s is some kind of higher strength steel. But the plating is 1/8” thick, the cross frame - though reinforced - is 2-1/2” thick, and the bolt spacing is only an 8” spread. That think doesn’t look like a receiver overbuilt for towing (something safely less than 3500 lbs) confidently on the trail - more like minimal optimization for 3500lbs on the road. I want the wiring harness, but the tow package for sure isn’t worth $595, and that receiver is getting replaced as soon a something significantly better is available. I looked by the way to see if I felt a Ranger receiver would bolt on where the tow eyes bolt to the frame. Maybe, but I think the muffler and muffler mounts (which are crammed in there) May conflict. Until something comes along, your Jeep friend may be towing your overland trailer out.
Overall impression - coming from a JKUR / adjusting for trim level - exactly what I was expecting. Engine compartment way better. Towing is a cheap, whimpy afterthought that is causing a bit of introspection.
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