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Jeep Wrangler 4xe

Jeep Wrangler 4xe New cars

Jeep introduces the new Wrangler hybrid at the 2022 Detroit Auto Show.

The variant is dubbed the 2023 Wrangler Willys 4xe and brings several off-road goodies you'd expect from the automaker.
The new Wrangler will be sold with LED headlights and fog lights as standard features.
Other equipment includes a nine-speaker Alpine sound system, all-season floor mats, and 17-inch black-painted alloy wheels.
There are also visual improvements in the form of a black grille and a Willys sticker on the hood with the 4xe's Electric Blue motif.
A Sun and Screen package will be an available option for the Willys 4xe, adding an 8.4-inch touchscreen and Sky One-Touch Power-Top.
The SUV doesn't receive a powertrain update, continuing to pair a 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder engine with a hybrid dual-motor setup.
The resulting combined output is 375 horsepower (280 kilowatts) and 470 pound-feet (637 Newton-meters) of torque.
All of this is combined with Jeep's TorqueFlite eight-speed automatic gearbox.
It also offers an all-electric driving range of 21 miles (33.7 km) – the same as the rest of the Wrangler 4xe lineup – and a 17-kilowatt-hour battery pack.
Jeep will give this SUV a suspension lift from the factory, increasing its ground clearance to 10.1 inches.
Additionally, it receives a limited-slip rear differential, plus off-road upgrades like the regular Wrangler.
The Willys 4xe will be equipped with heavy-duty Dana 44 axles, chunky mud-terrain tires, 30-inch water fording capability, and 2.72:1 Selec-Trac full-time four-wheel drive.
Jeep North America boss and senior VP Jim Morrison calls the 2023 Wrangler Willy 4xe "the ultimate combination of capability and electrification, plus a touch of vintage."
The 2023 Jeep Wrangler Willys 4xe goes on sale in the fourth quarter of this year.
When it reaches showrooms, the price tag will be 55,590 US dollars (Rp. 830.8 million) - including destination charges, but not tax credits.
This starting price makes it the cheapest Wrangler 4xe hybrid available, beating the 2023 Wrangler Sahara 4xe which starts at US $ 56,360.

Jeep Wrangler 4xe Review

A good deed turned into a refresher course: that’s how I ended up driving the 2023 Jeep Wrangler Willys 4xe.



Flashback to a week ago. Jeep had brought the new-for-2023 Willys trim of its Wrangler 4xe to the Automobile Journalists Association of Canada’s (AJAC) annual EcoRun challenge. EcoRun shines a spotlight on, well, the eco-friendly vehicles available to consumers. And the plug-in Wrangler is the best-selling PHEV out there. At the end of the event, instead of loading the SUV onto a truck in Kelowna, British Columbia, I’d be driving it back to a dealership just outside of Vancouver.

As luck would have it, I’d then be driving the entire 2024 Wrangler lineup days later, in Utah.


While you’ll have to wait another week to hear about that, we here at AutoGuide thought it was important to get in a quick refresher on the current Wrangler 4xe. Here’s what I gleaned from my 250-mile (400-kilometer) road trip.


Jeep Wrangler 4xe Exterior review

New PHEV Entry Point

The Willys 4xe arrived late on the scene last year, for the 2023 model year. It brings the price of the plug-in lower—if only slightly—to $56,530 (CAD 62,190) including the destination. While only slightly cheaper than the existing Sahara, the Willys offers a flavor that’s more in keeping with the Wrangler’s vibe. No 20-inch wheels here; you’ve got chunky 17s wearing 32-inch Bridgestone mud-terrain tires. The Willys also adopts the Rubicon’s shocks (and the resultant ride height increase) and a rear limited-slip differential. Throw in some retro-tastic styling cues, like the black-out nose and the “Electric 4 Wheel Drive” decal out back, and coat the rest of it in stand-out Punk’n paint, and the Willys 4xe looks excellent.

There are no other visual changes; Jeep is saving those for the ’24 model. But again, this is the Wrangler we’re talking about: even small children can draw it from memory.
Jeep Wrangler 4xe Exterior view

Choose Your Own Adventure


The 4xe offers buyers an additional level of control over the electrified powertrain. There are three E-Selec drive modes: Hybrid, Electric, and E-Save. The first two are pretty self-explanatory. Hybrid is the great all-rounder, and the default, unlocking the full 375 horsepower and 470 pound-feet of torque when requested. The 4xe isn’t a hot rod—that’d be the Rubicon 392 and its Hemi V8—but it’ll scoot to highway speeds in around 6 seconds. You know, before aerodynamics take over. The hand-off between propulsion systems isn’t the smoothest out there, but to this writer, that’s not a problem. For the Grand Cherokee maybe, but the Wrangler need not be too refined.

Electric cuts power to just 134 hp and 181 lb-ft, but you’d be surprised at how able the Wrangler remains in around-town driving. Officially it’ll do 21 miles (34 kilometers) on a charge, but I saw the estimate creep upwards with careful throttle use.
Jeep Wrangler 4xe Exterior
E-Save allows the driver to hold onto all those electrons for later deployment. Except not. Sorta. Ish. When activated, E-Save will prioritize the 2.0-liter gas powerplant as much as possible, sure. But keep a close eye on the gauges and you will see the electric motors offering a hand here and there, especially at low speeds. It’s unlikely to ever affect the remaining charge percentage since the 4xe will build it back up via regenerative braking, but it’s noteworthy nonetheless.

This granularity makes it easy to plan ahead to maximize the different propulsion systems. I’d stick to E-Save heading up some of the mountain passes outside Kelowna, then swap to Electric on the ride down, essentially coasting while regaining charge. Even with a tight schedule to get the Wrangler back in time, and starting with a 1-percent charge, I averaged 11.0 L/100 km (21.4 mpg).

Hook the 4xe up to a 110-volt outlet and you can recharge the 17.3-kWh battery pack in 12 hours. Plug into a 32-amp Level 2 setup and you can be done in a little over two hours.
Jeep Wrangler 4xe Interior
As is the case with the exterior, the 4xe’s cabin is essentially the same as that of the gas-powered Willys. The simple and short dashboard harkens back to the original Jeeps, with a light dusting of modern tech in the shape of the central, 8.4-inch touchscreen and driver information display. A gaggle of buttons below takes a bit of getting used to, but good on Jeep for sticking to physical controls here, with chunky rotary dials that can be handled with gloves.

The Willys isn’t some stripped-down workhorse, though. The AC is super-effective, and the cloth seats even come with heating for the front forks. The view out that upright windshield, with the high-clearance fender flares framing the shot, is easily as iconic as the Porsche 911. It’s a feel-good perch that’s hard to match.

The four-door Unlimited body style has quickly become the main seller for Wrangler, and it’s easy to see why. The second row is as spacious as an RAV4, though taller folks will be mindful of the body frame.

Uconnect 4 is still one of the more user-friendly infotainments out there, even though this iteration is slow and unpretty. The Wrangler’s Off-Road Pages app remains a great companion piece, providing quick access to details like pitch and roll, the current drivetrain setup, and accessory gauges.
Jeep Wrangler 4xe Side view

Not The Handful It Once Was


The Wrangler has something of a reputation as a wanderer. The same hearty platform that makes it such a beast off-road can have it feeling vague and unwieldy on the tarmac. Yet my return trip would only cover asphalt. Oh yeah, and despite the images, it all took place in a downpour right up until the final 30 minutes before the dealership.

But you know what? The Wrangler 4xe was a fine road trip companion. Yes, it's noisy inside, especially with the constant dings of raindrops on the three-piece Freedom Top. But surely that’s what the bass-heavy sound system is for. The tiny steering corrections to keep it pointed in the right direction blend into the background, too. Those chunky tires give the Wrangler a squidgy ride that didn’t beat me up over the nearly five non-stop hours we spent together, either.

The adaptive cruise control works well, keeping the right distance from the car out front, and the blind-spot monitoring never misses a beat.
Jeep Wrangler 4xe View

Verdict: 2023 Jeep Wrangler Willys 4xe


With its smattering of options, this particular 2023 Jeep Wrangler Willys 4xe rang to the tune of CAD 71,015 including destination, or about $66,990 in the US for an equivalent build. Don’t forget that it may be eligible for federal and state/provincial incentives, however.

The 4xe remains a hugely appealing variation of the best-selling off-roader. It’s easy to use, quick when you need it, and yet capable of exploring nature in near-silence—something its cross-town rival simply can’t do. The Willys brings the point of entry closer for more people while staying true to the Wrangler’s rough-and-tumble roots. You can possess your sugary confection and also consume it. 

 

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