I'm going to agree with Jeepdreamer here. The older stuff is what I grew up wheeling and wrenching on. It's just where my comfort level is. I remember the time I was sitting at a stop in a '77 full-size Cherokee (SJ series, body on frame), and I was rear-ended by a newer Honda Accord. I wasn't even sure I felt something at first; if anything, it was a little tap. I briefly debated whether to even bother getting out and addressing the issue, but I did. And I was shocked by what I saw. The Accord had several thousand dollars worth of damage. My Jeep on the other hand had a scrape on the bumper that the insurance adjuster cut me a check for $250 to repair. I got some chrome cleaner, and the "scrape" turned out to be just some paint from the Honda. My Jeep literally didn't have a scratch on it. That's my comfort level. And that's just as well because I am slowly but surely getting priced out of the new Jeep market.
I still think that, at the very least, a roadster unibody Jeep would need to have some sort of roll cage integrated into the body structure for strength and support. Technically, I guess that would make it more of a space frame than a unibody or monocoque design. Meh. No matter--to me at least. Toyota, Land Rover, and Jeep have all gone to unibody and IFS. They all have brilliantly compensated for the articulation deficiency by ever more complex technological gee-gaws that actually work pretty well given their intended use. It's just not my thing. Soon, the only body on frame, live axle SUV left available in the US market will be the Benz G-Wagon. Talk about being priced out of the segment...:Wow1: