Used 2006 JeepLiberty Sport 3.7

 
    Exterior Color
    Green
    Interior Color
    Beige
    Odometer
    66,469 miles
    Body/Seating
    SUV/5 seats
    Fuel Economy
    18/22 MPG City/Hwy
    Transmission
    Automatic
    Drivetrain
    4x4
    Engine
    V6 FI / 4 WHEEL DRIVE
    VIN
    1J4GL48K96W271948
    Stock Number
    10542
    Jeep Liberty
    • Certified

    Included Packages & Options

    • Transmission: 4-Speed Automatic w/OD$825
      • Command-Trac Part Time 4WD System
      • Lock-Up Torque Converter

    Highlighted Features

    • Split folding rear seat
    • Remote keyless entry
    • Rear window wiper

    Included Packages & Accessories

    • Intermittent Wipers
    • Cloth Interior
    • Power Door Locks
    • Power Brakes
    • Power Windows
    • CD player
    • Tilt Steering
    • Center Arm Rest
    • Cruise Control
    • Power Mirrors
    • Cup Holder
    • Power-Assist Disc Brakes
    • Power Steering
    • Power Antenna
    • Air Conditioning
    • Alloy Wheels
    • Climate Control
    • Anti-Lock Brakes (ABS)
    • Transmission: 4-Speed Automatic w/OD
    • Lock-Up Torque Converter
    • Command-Trac Part Time 4WD System
    • Engine: 3.7L V6
    • 3.7L Badge

    Detailed Specifications

    • 1-touch down
    • Air conditioning
    • Driver door bin
    • Driver vanity mirror
    • Front beverage holders
    • Illuminated entry
    • Passenger door bin
    • Passenger vanity mirror
    • Power windows
    • Rear beverage holders
    • Remote keyless entry
    • Tilt steering wheel
    • Front anti-roll bar
    • Front wheel independent suspension
    • Power steering
    • Rear anti-roll bar
    • Wheel size: 16"
    • CD player
    • Speakers: 6
    • Front center armrest
    • Front seats: bucket
    • Max seating capacity: 5
    • Rear seats: split-bench
    • Rear seats Folding position: fold forward seatback
    • Split folding rear seat
    • Drive type: four-wheel
    • Engine location: front
    • Fuel economy city: 18mpg
    • Fuel economy highway: 22mpg
    • Fuel tank capacity: 20.5gal.
    • Sequential multi-point fuel injection
    • Approach angle: 36 deg
    • Departure angle: 32 deg
    • Ground clearance (max): 239mm (9.4")
    • Ramp breakover angle: 22 deg
    • Bodyside moldings
    • Power door mirrors
    • Rear cargo: conventional
    • Exterior body width: 1,819mm (71.6")
    • Exterior height: 1,806mm (71.1")
    • Exterior length: 4,430mm (174.4")
    • Front headroom: 1,034mm (40.7")
    • Front hiproom: 1,448mm (57.0")
    • Front legroom: 1,036mm (40.8")
    • Front shoulder room: 1,435mm (56.5")
    • Interior cargo volume: 821 L (29 cu.ft.)
    • Interior maximum cargo volume: 1,954 L (69 cu.ft.)
    • Passenger volume: 2,936L (103.7 cu.ft.)
    • Payload: 522kg (1,150lbs)
    • Rear headroom: 1,069mm (42.1")
    • Rear hiproom: 1,204mm (47.4")
    • Rear legroom: 945mm (37.2")
    • Rear shoulder room: 1,435mm (56.5")
    • Turning radius: 5.5m (17.9')
    • Wheelbase: 2,649mm (104.3")
    • Delay-off headlights
    • Display: analog
    • Front reading lights
    • Rear window defroster
    • Rear window wiper
    • Tachometer
    • Variably intermittent wipers
    • 4 wheel disc brakes
    • ABS brakes
    • Brake assist
    • Dual front impact airbags
    • Electronic stability
    • Ignition disable
    • Occupant sensing airbag
    • Panic alarm
    • Traction control

    Standard Features

    • Command-Trac Part Time 4WD System
    • Lock-Up Torque Converter
    • 3.7L Badge

    Dealer Notes

    RAMSEY CORP IS HOME OF GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL! THIS VEHICLE COMES WITH A FREE 3 MONTH WARRANTY; EXTENDED WARRANTIES AVAILABLE.

    Tow Hitch 
    LOW MILES ! 
    2006 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT
    1J4GL48K96W271948
    4 DOOR SPORT UTILITY 3.7L V6 FI
    4 WHEEL DRIVE2006 Jeep Liberty
    At a time when price per gallon is as volatile as fuel itself, interest has returned to diesel technology, which turns our attention to the diesel version of Jeep's compact sport utility vehicle, the quick-selling Liberty CRD (technically either the Sport or Limited 4x4 trim level with optional equipment). Diesel engines are about 20 percent more efficient than comparable gasoline types, so they burn less fuel. In this country, diesel engines have long come in heavy duty pickup trucks, and more recently in the Ford Excursion and Hummer H1 SUVs, but the only companies to sell diesel passenger cars in recent times have been Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen.

    The Liberty has changed little recently, so I'm concentrating on the diesel aspect in this report. I'm a diesel fan, in part because of a fascination with biodiesel — the alternative fuel on which I'm most bullish. Diesels have a bad reputation in the U.S., where they're perceived as dirty, smelly, cacophonous and underpowered. People complain that diesel fuel is too hard to find, too messy to dispense and not substantially cheaper than gas. I got into the Liberty thinking all these notions were overstated and out of date.

    Thanks to trucks, old-school engines and General Motors' catastrophic attempt in the late 1970s and '80s to convert gasoline engines into diesels, Americans generally are turned off by the very idea. What they don't realize is that there are actually many very smooth, quiet, refined and potent diesel car engines in the world now.

    Unfortunately, the Liberty's is not one of them. The turbocharged 2.8-liter inline-four-cylinder starts like the diesels of yore, with a raucous clatter that dies down only somewhat as the engine warms up. It's not an engine so much as a gem tumbler. Now, I wouldn't be so harsh if ... if the Liberty weren't. But seriously, if diesel engines are to stand a chance of making inroads in North America, people need to recognize that the Liberty CRD is hardly the best that technology has to offer. The reality is that many Americans have been exposed to modern executions of diesel power by sharing the road with Mercedes and Volkswagen diesel models. They just didn't know it.

    So what exactly is good about diesels? Torque is good, and diesels have plenty of it. Take a look at the ratings below for the Liberty's diesel and gasoline engines.

    Jeep Liberty Engines
    GasolineDiesel
    Type3.7-liter V-62.8-liter inline-4
    Horsepower210 @ 5,200 rpm160 @ 3,800 rpm
    Torque (lbs.-ft.)235 @ 4,000 rpm295 @ 1,800 rpm
    Redline6,000 rpm4,300 rpm
    EPA-Estimated Fuel Economy
    (city/highway, mpg)
    17*/2222/26
    *Four-speed automatic; six-speed manual is 18 mpg city
    Manufacturer data

    Clearly, the diesel has more torque than horsepower, and gobs more torque than even the larger-displacement V-6. This is not a bad thing for the stop-and-go nature of U.S. motoring. In practice, the Liberty CRD lurched off the line like a stallion. The automatic transmission has five gears, but I noticed when accelerating onto the interstate that the stallion went a bit lame.

    I drove the Liberty CRD on a private offroad course, where another benefit of diesel power was evident: the ability to climb over obstacles without breaking a sweat. I switched the transfer case to low gear, put the transmission in 1st and took my foot off the pedals. The Liberty CRD did the rest. It needed no coaxing to climb moderate inclines, and it even descended the declines in a more controlled fashion than the gasoline version did. A diesel's higher compression ratio gives it more engine braking.

    Roughly half of the cars sold in Europe are diesel, mainly because fuel is much more expensive there and concern about greenhouse gases is greater. Because diesels burn less fuel, they release less carbon dioxide, the greenhouse gas. But aren't diesels dirty? Yes, here in the U.S. they pollute more than gasoline, but greenhouse gas technically isn't a pollutant. Car pollution, also called emissions, includes stuff like nitrogen oxides and particulate matter, both of which are in high concentrations in diesel exhaust. Their contribution to smog is why diesel car sales are outlawed in California and a few restrictive Northeastern states.

    Overseas, low-sulfur fuel and additional onboard pollution controls make diesel cars dramatically cleaner. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is requiring the phase-in of this cleaner fuel starting in June 2006, after which any new, properly equipped diesel that burns it will meet stringent new standards.

    When the time came to return the Liberty, I went to the web to find a diesel filling station. I had to drive a little farther than I would for gas, but I rationalized it away. When I arrived, the diesel pump was out of order. Then I drove around looking for another one, beginning to feel the inconvenience I'd dismissed before. When I finally found one, sure enough, the pump handle was coated in the oily diesel fuel, which doesn't evaporate like gasoline does. The concrete was coated, too. When the tank was full, I literally skated back to the front door and got in, tracking a film of diesel fuel and its accompanying odor with me.

    My receipt told me that I'd bought 10.7 gallons at $2.90 per gallon. Unfortunately, at the time, a few weeks ago, regular gasoline was selling at the same station for $2.35 per gallon — about 23 percent less. That means that if I got the true 20 percent better fuel economy with the diesel, I still paid a little more than I would have for gas.

    Historically, diesel fuel cost considerably less than gasoline. Then it crept up, overtaking gasoline prices in the fourth quarter of 2004. Ever since, it has been neck-and-neck, with diesel occasionally more expensive. In the past six months, higher diesel prices have dominated, thanks mainly to the Gulf region's brutal hurricanes. To oversimplify, gasoline is basically further-refined diesel, which means high demand for one affects the other's availability, and gasoline got the priority.

    Fuel pricing is always complex and seldom follows rules. Diesel fuel is similar to home heating oil, so late autumn and early winter typically bring scarcity that raises diesel prices. Now that we're almost through a warmer-than-average winter, one would expect diesel prices to come down. We're still waiting. Now, as this review publishes, the price remains higher: an average $2.54 per gallon nationally, while regular gasoline is $2.37.

    The more I learn about energy, the more it seems that it's an industry in balance. Significantly cheaper fuel will never come. The most we can hope for are alternatives that are slightly more affordable or that have some other benefit, such as renewability, lower pollution and domestic sourcing. Biodiesel offers all of these and is compatible with petroleum diesel. If its availability increases, there's no shortage of cars overseas that offer diesel engines, including some we're accustomed to in the States, like the Liberty.

    So with all the downsides of diesel and the Liberty CRD, why has the model sold so quickly? Because some people just like diesels. Their fuel economy is better, they have greater towing torque, and diesel engines tend to last twice as long as their gasoline counterparts. I also believe there's a type of person who buys a diesel not in spite of but because of its roughness. They like waiting for a glow plug to warm up before starting the engine. They like the clatter. They like filling up at an exclusive pump and generally feeling like they have something unique. Nowhere is this rough and crude engine type going to succeed more than in the rough and crude genre of offroad vehicles. Given the Liberty's market success, don't be surprised to see more diesel SUVs in the future.




    KBB.com Consumer Reviews

    Kelley Blue Book - KBB.com
    Overall4.1Out of 5
    • We have bonded.

      By Doug on Wednesday, February 12, 2014

      5.0
      I originally thought this was a not quite up to speed. Over the years I have learned to really enjoy and respect this car. It loves ice and snow. It has been reliable and not needed an a lot of repairs. We have 160,000 miles on it and plan to go over 200,000. I am even thinking about buying another one or similar someday. Some people don't think the Liberty is a real Jeep, you don't know what you are missing. My primary negative issue is the mileage. It may dream of 20/mpg but it is doubtful it will ever get there.
    • It just keeps going.

      By 6b87fb78 on Tuesday, June 27, 2023

      5.0
      My 2005 Liberty now has 278,000 miles on it. It is the Limited version with the 2.8L diesel engine and five speed transmission. Power heated seats, man those are nice in winter, and ABS. I ordered the upgraded four wheel system that has two four wheel drive systems in high and one in low gear. I can set it in full time 4x4 and forget it if I wish. I live ten miles from nearest city in WI and sometimes the snow piles up on the roads, and in my driveway. So I needed a good four wheel drive vehicle. This Jeep Liberty has been a blessing. It is now 17 years old and is headed for 300,000 miles by next summer. It has never failed me except when the alternator gave up the ghost. I didn't quite make it to my favorite store for a new alternator. I could not believe that big battery was used up in a 26 mile trip. But there are three commputers in that Jeep so I suspect they pull a lot of amps. Had to get a AAA tow to the shop. An older, simpler car could have gone 40-50 miles on that big battery I installed. So far the only expense has been maintenance related, no major failures except the alternator. I have replaced brakes, and shocks and a few steering parts but the engine and transmission work like new. OOPS, forgot, the rear window quit on me. I have it propped up with a vacuum handle like you might put in the shower. LOL To be open and educational, I use ONLY synthetic lubricants. I change engine oil and filter at 5,000 miles. I have the transmission serviced at a shop so I can get a professional to examine it at about 75,000 miles and insist on synthetic ATF+4. I have towed heavy trailers several times over hundreds of miles, it has not been babied but keeps on ticking. One time I pulled a 3600 pound trailer from OH to WI with not a hint of trouble. I made certain it came with the trailer tow package from the factory. WARNING. That package includes a heavy duty radiator, a cooler for transmission and all the wiring and hitch for towing. You or dealer can bolt on a hitch but it won't have the heavy duty radiator and transmission cooler. The biggest expense has been the timing belt at the 100,000 mile mark. Last time it cost $1400. But if that belt breaks it can damage engine parts and then the cost might be $4000. It is a big job I have been reluctant to tackle but I'm seriously thinking of trying it at the 300,000 mark. I really like this little Liberty, it seems to have a rare personality. So easy to park, good visibility all around. It can hold five people plus five suicases if need be. I had it ziebarted intending to keep it till I am too old to drive. I'll do compression check at 300000 to learn what its like inside and decide whether to run it or have it rebuilt.
    • Reliable!!

      By Ariella on Wednesday, March 31, 2021

      5.0
      Owned this Jeep for 10 years, it’s still going strong!! Never any major problems!!