I will play “Devil’s Advocate“ on the “Is it a Defender?” Question while I take a 10 minute break from work.
I think the subjectivity of the criteria of ’what a Defender is” to be an interesting question. Most of what people cite as making a Defender a Defender are things like
@givemethewillys mentioned (and many others in this thread have mentioned) — solid axles, ladder frame, etc. Sure the Defender had those features, but most 4x4s designed in the 1970s/1980s also had those features. Bronco, Wrangler, Defender, and I think even Chevy had a solid axle, convertible, ladder framed 4x4 back then (K5 Blazer, I think?). So, perhaps this is less a case of “that’s what makes a defender” and more “that’s how they made 4x4s 40 years ago?
Edit to clarify after reading JeepColorado’s article: There was a comment under the article that crystallized what I was trying to say a bit better.
The reason we like the features of the old Defender — like the ladder frame, solid axles, etc. — is because they performed better than IFS/Unibody rigs dId at the time. There are still a ton of old Defenders on the road — not a ton of unibody‘IFS/IRS 4x4s from the 1980s still on the roads today! And I think that’s true of modern vehicles in general — I’d put money that a ladder framed rig like a JK or JL, made today, will do far better, for far longer, than the majority of unibody IFS rigs on the road today. The majority of the modern Unibodies are not designed for off road, so the ladder frame/solid axle rigs have a clear advantage.
But if that’s old technology, and the new Unibody/IFS technology performs
better than the ‘old tech’, then isn’t this new Defender concieveably very deserving of the title? If it performs off road, has a great payload, is reliable and rugged, does it not have more in common with the old Defender than it does different, as compared to other vehicles on the road today?
To use an analogy, is my iPad
not a computer just because it doesn’t have a keyboard? It functions better than my laptop. It can do more stuff more reliably than any other computer I’ve ever owned. And if it’s not a computer because it doesn’t have a keyboard, but I use a Bluetooth keyboard for the same functionality, does it then become “Not a computer” because it’s not using vacuum tubes that I can easily change when one blows? I’m sure this question has been covered somewhere in the 132 pages of this thread but I’m curious to hear other’s thoughts now that there are more specs and info available.
And I honestly don’t care if they called it a Defender or something else. I’m keen on this thing because our hobby has one more option, and that’s never a bad thing. I’ve enjoyed learning from this discussion and do hope it continues!
(
@givemethewillys, to be clear I am not pointing fingers or picking on what you said, just using your statement as an example to do a deeper dive into the tech and features and why it matters. If Chrysler told me the next Wrangler was going to be Unibody and iFS, I would raise an eyebrow with skepticism, and I’d let others buy it first to know how it was before diving in with my own money!)