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Alistair Ross 08-04-2004 05:56 AM

Jeep Cherokee, Pro's and Con's
 
Thinking of buying a Cherokee, say 92 to 95 what are the Pro's and Cons of
these Jeeps. What to look out for when buying second hand.

Thanks....ttfn.....Alistair




Jo Bo 08-04-2004 06:16 AM

Re: Jeep Cherokee, Pro's and Con's
 
I've bought two Charokees in a month so I can give you some pointers. First was
a 89 with 109k miles and original owner. Lots of mechanical parts from front
axel u joints to tail pipe. Second is a 96 with 139k miles. Much better
condition (half the age). What you need to look for is rust in the floor pan.
From underneath, any peeling of the factory rustproofing is a sure sign. It's a
major project removing the carpet but I did on both. Seats and console must
come out along with lots of plastic trim.It starts where two parts are welded
together. This includes floor pan to unibody frame rails, seat and seatbelt
reinforcement pieces.Water getts between them and does it's deed. On the 89 it
was barly visable from the outside but there were gaping holes visable from the
inside. The 96 was is in far better shape with just areas starting to swell up.
I liberally sprayed the inside and underside with a wax based rustproofing.
Hoping to get it between the various plates. Wax is not as durable as a tar
based stuff but heals it's self when nicked or whatever and I'll need to
reapply it yearly. It solvant based so it may also soften the original
rustproofing that's hardened.

Happy hunting
JoBo
"Alistair Ross" <asr@eng.cam.ac.uk> wrote in message
news:ceqbq5$49e$1@pegasus.csx.cam.ac.uk...
> Thinking of buying a Cherokee, say 92 to 95 what are the Pro's and Cons of
> these Jeeps. What to look out for when buying second hand.
>
> Thanks....ttfn.....Alistair
>
>
>




Jo Bo 08-04-2004 06:16 AM

Re: Jeep Cherokee, Pro's and Con's
 
I've bought two Charokees in a month so I can give you some pointers. First was
a 89 with 109k miles and original owner. Lots of mechanical parts from front
axel u joints to tail pipe. Second is a 96 with 139k miles. Much better
condition (half the age). What you need to look for is rust in the floor pan.
From underneath, any peeling of the factory rustproofing is a sure sign. It's a
major project removing the carpet but I did on both. Seats and console must
come out along with lots of plastic trim.It starts where two parts are welded
together. This includes floor pan to unibody frame rails, seat and seatbelt
reinforcement pieces.Water getts between them and does it's deed. On the 89 it
was barly visable from the outside but there were gaping holes visable from the
inside. The 96 was is in far better shape with just areas starting to swell up.
I liberally sprayed the inside and underside with a wax based rustproofing.
Hoping to get it between the various plates. Wax is not as durable as a tar
based stuff but heals it's self when nicked or whatever and I'll need to
reapply it yearly. It solvant based so it may also soften the original
rustproofing that's hardened.

Happy hunting
JoBo
"Alistair Ross" <asr@eng.cam.ac.uk> wrote in message
news:ceqbq5$49e$1@pegasus.csx.cam.ac.uk...
> Thinking of buying a Cherokee, say 92 to 95 what are the Pro's and Cons of
> these Jeeps. What to look out for when buying second hand.
>
> Thanks....ttfn.....Alistair
>
>
>




Jo Bo 08-04-2004 06:16 AM

Re: Jeep Cherokee, Pro's and Con's
 
I've bought two Charokees in a month so I can give you some pointers. First was
a 89 with 109k miles and original owner. Lots of mechanical parts from front
axel u joints to tail pipe. Second is a 96 with 139k miles. Much better
condition (half the age). What you need to look for is rust in the floor pan.
From underneath, any peeling of the factory rustproofing is a sure sign. It's a
major project removing the carpet but I did on both. Seats and console must
come out along with lots of plastic trim.It starts where two parts are welded
together. This includes floor pan to unibody frame rails, seat and seatbelt
reinforcement pieces.Water getts between them and does it's deed. On the 89 it
was barly visable from the outside but there were gaping holes visable from the
inside. The 96 was is in far better shape with just areas starting to swell up.
I liberally sprayed the inside and underside with a wax based rustproofing.
Hoping to get it between the various plates. Wax is not as durable as a tar
based stuff but heals it's self when nicked or whatever and I'll need to
reapply it yearly. It solvant based so it may also soften the original
rustproofing that's hardened.

Happy hunting
JoBo
"Alistair Ross" <asr@eng.cam.ac.uk> wrote in message
news:ceqbq5$49e$1@pegasus.csx.cam.ac.uk...
> Thinking of buying a Cherokee, say 92 to 95 what are the Pro's and Cons of
> these Jeeps. What to look out for when buying second hand.
>
> Thanks....ttfn.....Alistair
>
>
>




Jo Bo 08-04-2004 06:16 AM

Re: Jeep Cherokee, Pro's and Con's
 
I've bought two Charokees in a month so I can give you some pointers. First was
a 89 with 109k miles and original owner. Lots of mechanical parts from front
axel u joints to tail pipe. Second is a 96 with 139k miles. Much better
condition (half the age). What you need to look for is rust in the floor pan.
From underneath, any peeling of the factory rustproofing is a sure sign. It's a
major project removing the carpet but I did on both. Seats and console must
come out along with lots of plastic trim.It starts where two parts are welded
together. This includes floor pan to unibody frame rails, seat and seatbelt
reinforcement pieces.Water getts between them and does it's deed. On the 89 it
was barly visable from the outside but there were gaping holes visable from the
inside. The 96 was is in far better shape with just areas starting to swell up.
I liberally sprayed the inside and underside with a wax based rustproofing.
Hoping to get it between the various plates. Wax is not as durable as a tar
based stuff but heals it's self when nicked or whatever and I'll need to
reapply it yearly. It solvant based so it may also soften the original
rustproofing that's hardened.

Happy hunting
JoBo
"Alistair Ross" <asr@eng.cam.ac.uk> wrote in message
news:ceqbq5$49e$1@pegasus.csx.cam.ac.uk...
> Thinking of buying a Cherokee, say 92 to 95 what are the Pro's and Cons of
> these Jeeps. What to look out for when buying second hand.
>
> Thanks....ttfn.....Alistair
>
>
>




Lee Ayrton 08-08-2004 05:14 PM

Re: Jeep Cherokee, Pro's and Con's
 
On Wed, 4 Aug 2004, Alistair Ross wrote:

> Thinking of buying a Cherokee, say 92 to 95 what are the Pro's and Cons
> of these Jeeps. What to look out for when buying second hand.


Rust along the rocker panels and rear quarters and under the floor.
Paint that gets sunburned and peels. Headliners (see below )seperate from
their foam backing and fall. CCV on the 4.0 system needs to be kept clean
or it will push oil out of the seals. The Crank Position Sensor is a
known problem and reported to be a bear to replace. The auto
transmissions around 1990 were made in France -- my local shop won't touch
`em because it takes too long to get parts. The fuel pump seems to have
about a 10 year design life, the radiator and water pump about 12 years.


The headliner: You can repair it yourself. Start with the dome lights,
pop out the lense, the lamp (it gets hot!) twist out the press-on
spring-steel nuts with pliers and unplug the dome light assembly. Then
start at the back. Remove the trim at the edge of the liner over the rear
hatch, then the side pieces (don't bother seperate them, just take out the
screws and pull the metal pieces away from the plastic over the door.)
Each metal side piece has a white plastic spacer captured by a screw, it
will fall out at you when you pull it out. Pry the caps off the over-door
grab handles (not too hard, they're anchored at the outer edge of the
base), remove two Torx scews from each, let the trim flop out of the way.
The trim over the driver's door has a mounded in barbed fastener, just
pull it away from the roof. Pry out the caps over the screws in the trim
on each windshield pillar, remove the screws and let the trim flop around.
Remove the visors, if you have the vanity mirror you'll have to unplug the
wires behind the right pillar trim.

The headliner is a fabric piece backed with foam rubber and glued to a
formed fiberglass shell. The foam rots and lets the fabric droop. The
fiberglass shell is attached at the front by two heavy-duty "velcro"-type
strips. Give it a good pull, either the velcro will part or it will pull
away from the fiberglass. If it does just glue it back on. The shell is
supported along the sides by a couple of U-channel clips, nothing fancy.
Release it all the way around and pull it out through the rear hatch.

Lay the liner fabric side up and release the edges (they don't rot -- go
figure), work your way to the center so you can fold the fabric over
itself. Don't pull it all the way off, you'll never get it lined up
again, just go to the center line. Brush away any remaining rotted foam.
Using 3M Spray Trim Adhesive (the kind that says on the label "Not for
repairing headliners" --seriously) spray an 8" strip on the shell and the
back of the fabric. Pull the fabric over, smooth it out, repeat on
another 8" swath until you get to the edge. Don't try to glue the
entire half in one go because you'll never get the fabric to lay flat
witout sticking in the wrong place or to itself. Now release the other
half and repeat. Let the solvents boil off for a couple of days -- you
don't want to be in a closed car with this stuff.

Reinstall the way it came out. Line up the rear edge and press up to make
the velcro grab.



Lee Ayrton 08-08-2004 05:14 PM

Re: Jeep Cherokee, Pro's and Con's
 
On Wed, 4 Aug 2004, Alistair Ross wrote:

> Thinking of buying a Cherokee, say 92 to 95 what are the Pro's and Cons
> of these Jeeps. What to look out for when buying second hand.


Rust along the rocker panels and rear quarters and under the floor.
Paint that gets sunburned and peels. Headliners (see below )seperate from
their foam backing and fall. CCV on the 4.0 system needs to be kept clean
or it will push oil out of the seals. The Crank Position Sensor is a
known problem and reported to be a bear to replace. The auto
transmissions around 1990 were made in France -- my local shop won't touch
`em because it takes too long to get parts. The fuel pump seems to have
about a 10 year design life, the radiator and water pump about 12 years.


The headliner: You can repair it yourself. Start with the dome lights,
pop out the lense, the lamp (it gets hot!) twist out the press-on
spring-steel nuts with pliers and unplug the dome light assembly. Then
start at the back. Remove the trim at the edge of the liner over the rear
hatch, then the side pieces (don't bother seperate them, just take out the
screws and pull the metal pieces away from the plastic over the door.)
Each metal side piece has a white plastic spacer captured by a screw, it
will fall out at you when you pull it out. Pry the caps off the over-door
grab handles (not too hard, they're anchored at the outer edge of the
base), remove two Torx scews from each, let the trim flop out of the way.
The trim over the driver's door has a mounded in barbed fastener, just
pull it away from the roof. Pry out the caps over the screws in the trim
on each windshield pillar, remove the screws and let the trim flop around.
Remove the visors, if you have the vanity mirror you'll have to unplug the
wires behind the right pillar trim.

The headliner is a fabric piece backed with foam rubber and glued to a
formed fiberglass shell. The foam rots and lets the fabric droop. The
fiberglass shell is attached at the front by two heavy-duty "velcro"-type
strips. Give it a good pull, either the velcro will part or it will pull
away from the fiberglass. If it does just glue it back on. The shell is
supported along the sides by a couple of U-channel clips, nothing fancy.
Release it all the way around and pull it out through the rear hatch.

Lay the liner fabric side up and release the edges (they don't rot -- go
figure), work your way to the center so you can fold the fabric over
itself. Don't pull it all the way off, you'll never get it lined up
again, just go to the center line. Brush away any remaining rotted foam.
Using 3M Spray Trim Adhesive (the kind that says on the label "Not for
repairing headliners" --seriously) spray an 8" strip on the shell and the
back of the fabric. Pull the fabric over, smooth it out, repeat on
another 8" swath until you get to the edge. Don't try to glue the
entire half in one go because you'll never get the fabric to lay flat
witout sticking in the wrong place or to itself. Now release the other
half and repeat. Let the solvents boil off for a couple of days -- you
don't want to be in a closed car with this stuff.

Reinstall the way it came out. Line up the rear edge and press up to make
the velcro grab.



Lee Ayrton 08-08-2004 05:14 PM

Re: Jeep Cherokee, Pro's and Con's
 
On Wed, 4 Aug 2004, Alistair Ross wrote:

> Thinking of buying a Cherokee, say 92 to 95 what are the Pro's and Cons
> of these Jeeps. What to look out for when buying second hand.


Rust along the rocker panels and rear quarters and under the floor.
Paint that gets sunburned and peels. Headliners (see below )seperate from
their foam backing and fall. CCV on the 4.0 system needs to be kept clean
or it will push oil out of the seals. The Crank Position Sensor is a
known problem and reported to be a bear to replace. The auto
transmissions around 1990 were made in France -- my local shop won't touch
`em because it takes too long to get parts. The fuel pump seems to have
about a 10 year design life, the radiator and water pump about 12 years.


The headliner: You can repair it yourself. Start with the dome lights,
pop out the lense, the lamp (it gets hot!) twist out the press-on
spring-steel nuts with pliers and unplug the dome light assembly. Then
start at the back. Remove the trim at the edge of the liner over the rear
hatch, then the side pieces (don't bother seperate them, just take out the
screws and pull the metal pieces away from the plastic over the door.)
Each metal side piece has a white plastic spacer captured by a screw, it
will fall out at you when you pull it out. Pry the caps off the over-door
grab handles (not too hard, they're anchored at the outer edge of the
base), remove two Torx scews from each, let the trim flop out of the way.
The trim over the driver's door has a mounded in barbed fastener, just
pull it away from the roof. Pry out the caps over the screws in the trim
on each windshield pillar, remove the screws and let the trim flop around.
Remove the visors, if you have the vanity mirror you'll have to unplug the
wires behind the right pillar trim.

The headliner is a fabric piece backed with foam rubber and glued to a
formed fiberglass shell. The foam rots and lets the fabric droop. The
fiberglass shell is attached at the front by two heavy-duty "velcro"-type
strips. Give it a good pull, either the velcro will part or it will pull
away from the fiberglass. If it does just glue it back on. The shell is
supported along the sides by a couple of U-channel clips, nothing fancy.
Release it all the way around and pull it out through the rear hatch.

Lay the liner fabric side up and release the edges (they don't rot -- go
figure), work your way to the center so you can fold the fabric over
itself. Don't pull it all the way off, you'll never get it lined up
again, just go to the center line. Brush away any remaining rotted foam.
Using 3M Spray Trim Adhesive (the kind that says on the label "Not for
repairing headliners" --seriously) spray an 8" strip on the shell and the
back of the fabric. Pull the fabric over, smooth it out, repeat on
another 8" swath until you get to the edge. Don't try to glue the
entire half in one go because you'll never get the fabric to lay flat
witout sticking in the wrong place or to itself. Now release the other
half and repeat. Let the solvents boil off for a couple of days -- you
don't want to be in a closed car with this stuff.

Reinstall the way it came out. Line up the rear edge and press up to make
the velcro grab.



Lee Ayrton 08-08-2004 05:14 PM

Re: Jeep Cherokee, Pro's and Con's
 
On Wed, 4 Aug 2004, Alistair Ross wrote:

> Thinking of buying a Cherokee, say 92 to 95 what are the Pro's and Cons
> of these Jeeps. What to look out for when buying second hand.


Rust along the rocker panels and rear quarters and under the floor.
Paint that gets sunburned and peels. Headliners (see below )seperate from
their foam backing and fall. CCV on the 4.0 system needs to be kept clean
or it will push oil out of the seals. The Crank Position Sensor is a
known problem and reported to be a bear to replace. The auto
transmissions around 1990 were made in France -- my local shop won't touch
`em because it takes too long to get parts. The fuel pump seems to have
about a 10 year design life, the radiator and water pump about 12 years.


The headliner: You can repair it yourself. Start with the dome lights,
pop out the lense, the lamp (it gets hot!) twist out the press-on
spring-steel nuts with pliers and unplug the dome light assembly. Then
start at the back. Remove the trim at the edge of the liner over the rear
hatch, then the side pieces (don't bother seperate them, just take out the
screws and pull the metal pieces away from the plastic over the door.)
Each metal side piece has a white plastic spacer captured by a screw, it
will fall out at you when you pull it out. Pry the caps off the over-door
grab handles (not too hard, they're anchored at the outer edge of the
base), remove two Torx scews from each, let the trim flop out of the way.
The trim over the driver's door has a mounded in barbed fastener, just
pull it away from the roof. Pry out the caps over the screws in the trim
on each windshield pillar, remove the screws and let the trim flop around.
Remove the visors, if you have the vanity mirror you'll have to unplug the
wires behind the right pillar trim.

The headliner is a fabric piece backed with foam rubber and glued to a
formed fiberglass shell. The foam rots and lets the fabric droop. The
fiberglass shell is attached at the front by two heavy-duty "velcro"-type
strips. Give it a good pull, either the velcro will part or it will pull
away from the fiberglass. If it does just glue it back on. The shell is
supported along the sides by a couple of U-channel clips, nothing fancy.
Release it all the way around and pull it out through the rear hatch.

Lay the liner fabric side up and release the edges (they don't rot -- go
figure), work your way to the center so you can fold the fabric over
itself. Don't pull it all the way off, you'll never get it lined up
again, just go to the center line. Brush away any remaining rotted foam.
Using 3M Spray Trim Adhesive (the kind that says on the label "Not for
repairing headliners" --seriously) spray an 8" strip on the shell and the
back of the fabric. Pull the fabric over, smooth it out, repeat on
another 8" swath until you get to the edge. Don't try to glue the
entire half in one go because you'll never get the fabric to lay flat
witout sticking in the wrong place or to itself. Now release the other
half and repeat. Let the solvents boil off for a couple of days -- you
don't want to be in a closed car with this stuff.

Reinstall the way it came out. Line up the rear edge and press up to make
the velcro grab.



dave AKA vwdoc1 08-08-2004 11:19 PM

Re: Jeep Cherokee, Pro's and Con's
 
Pretty nice rundown Lee!
The 87 and up automatic transmissions are basically good transmissions, AW4
I believe.
I think you were referring to the MANUAL transmissions being weak for the
early XJs.
later,
dave AKA vwdoc1

"Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
news:Pine.NEB.4.60.0408081614070.26180@panix3.pani x.com...
> On Wed, 4 Aug 2004, Alistair Ross wrote:
>
> > Thinking of buying a Cherokee, say 92 to 95 what are the Pro's and Cons
> > of these Jeeps. What to look out for when buying second hand.

>
> Rust along the rocker panels and rear quarters and under the floor.
> Paint that gets sunburned and peels. Headliners (see below )seperate from
> their foam backing and fall. CCV on the 4.0 system needs to be kept clean
> or it will push oil out of the seals. The Crank Position Sensor is a
> known problem and reported to be a bear to replace. The auto
> transmissions around 1990 were made in France -- my local shop won't touch
> `em because it takes too long to get parts. The fuel pump seems to have
> about a 10 year design life, the radiator and water pump about 12 years.
>
>



snip




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