What year did Jeep make the Wagoneer?

What year did Jeep make the Wagoneer?

1962
1963-1991 JEEP® WAGONEER (SJ) In 1962, the Jeep® Brand introduced the Wagoneer—the father of all luxury 4×4 SUVs.

What years did jeep make a truck?

Jeep produced pickup trucks continuously between 1947 and 1992, when the Comanche quietly dipped out of the market. (The Comanche’s platform-mate, the Cherokee SUV, lived on through 2002.)

What kind of transmission does a Jeep Grand Cherokee use?

TorqueFlite 42RE four-speed; 1994-96 4.0 L Grand Cherokee, 1996 V8 Grand Cherokee The Aisin-Warner four-speed automatic transmission (AW4) was co-designed by AMC and Borg Warner, and built by Aisin in their new facility for use with the Cherokee XJ’s 4.0L inline six cylinder engine.

Is the Jeep Wagoneer the same as the Jeep Cherokee?

All trucks shared the same body design as the Jeep® Wagoneer and Cherokee from the cab forward, and were offered with traditional slab-sided or step-side bodies. In 1984, AMC transferred the Wagoneer and Cherokee names to the small unibody XJs. The full-size SJ Wagoneer was preserved until 1991, however, under the “Grand Wagoneer” name.

When did the first Jeep transmission come out?

Assuming your Jeep hasn’t had a different transmission swapped into it, here are the original factory transmissions produced since 1945 (manuals) and 1963 (automatics). There you have it! A chronological history of transmissions for Jeeps (for you history buffs out there).

When did AMC stop making the Jeep Wagoneer?

All trucks shared the same body design as the Jeep® Wagoneer and Cherokee from the cab forward, and were offered with traditional slab-sided or step-side bodies. In 1984, AMC transferred the Wagoneer and Cherokee names to the small unibody XJs.

TorqueFlite 42RE four-speed; 1994-96 4.0 L Grand Cherokee, 1996 V8 Grand Cherokee The Aisin-Warner four-speed automatic transmission (AW4) was co-designed by AMC and Borg Warner, and built by Aisin in their new facility for use with the Cherokee XJ’s 4.0L inline six cylinder engine.

Assuming your Jeep hasn’t had a different transmission swapped into it, here are the original factory transmissions produced since 1945 (manuals) and 1963 (automatics). There you have it! A chronological history of transmissions for Jeeps (for you history buffs out there).

What kind of transmission does an AMC Wagoneer use?

The TH400 was phased out for the 1980 models, when the A-727 replaced the TH-400 as the only automatic transmission option for both the SJ Wagoneer/Cherokee wagons and the J-10/J-20 trucks. Internally similar to the Chrysler A-727, the case was one-piece, cast with an AMC pattern bellhousing (not interchangeable with a Chrysler pattern A-727).

When did Jeep stop using the AMC transmission?

The TH400 AMC case was used until the end of 1979 model production. The 232 cu in (3.8 L) I6 used in 1970-72 Jeep DJ “Postal Jeep” was backed up by the Borg-Warner T-35 3-speed automatic.