I do it every morning around 9:30...Oh, you said s h i F t, my badIt’s hard to drink coffee, smoke a cigar and shift. That’s my reason.
Sponsored
I do it every morning around 9:30...Oh, you said s h i F t, my badIt’s hard to drink coffee, smoke a cigar and shift. That’s my reason.
It’s hard to drink coffee, smoke a cigar and shift. That’s my reason.
Nothing ventured, nothing gained. We all know the answer to a question never asked.It may be coming if we keep pushing. That pricing survey email said the Mansquatch was "not currently available". There's hope.
Bound for showrooms/dealer stock yes...i would like to see those numbers for customers who pre order. Dealers don't want a manual trans model sitting around because they then have to find that specific "enthusiast type" customer to buy it, whereas an auto for stock WILL eventually sellSo let's look at that with real numbers....
Jeep Wrangler sales went from 56% having manuals, to less than 20% having manual order by 2018. Clearly a dying area of interest. Something with that precipitous a decline doesn't warrant the time from a profit standpoint.
And about my 5%, which was a total guess, I was actually...right.
Still, Jeep says that fewer than 5 percent of new Wranglers leave its Toledo, Ohio, assembly plant bound for U.S. showrooms with the manual transmission.
--https://www.autotrader.com/car-news/there-are-just-3-new-manual-transmission-suvs-left-281474979978031
https://www.inwheeltime.com/grabn-gears-no-more/
Not all of us. I’d get a Badlands 2.3 manual before resorting to an auto w/ Sasquatch. Badlands has most of the stuff. Tires are easily swapped for larger ones. A trans... not so much.Yeah but you'll just buy the automatic anyways and pay ford $1600 more than you planned. Ford wins