Automotive

Ultra-light 4Speed leads this year's 7 Jeep Easter Safari concepts

View 79 Images
Jeep 4Speed: built for speed, but not by beefing up the engine. This is an ultra-lightweight concept
Jeep
Jeep Sandstorm: inspired by Baja racing
Jeep
Jeep Sandstorm: long-travel suspension and huge power rounds out its desert racing credentials
Jeep
Jeep Sandstorm: don't strike out on a Baja race without a spare tire
Jeep
Jeep Sandstorm: huge spare tire dominates the rear end
Jeep
Jeep Sandstorm: hello there little guy!
Jeep
Jeep Sandstorm: yes, that's a gearshift pattern
Jeep
Jeep Sandstorm: center console
Jeep
Jeep Sandstorm: racing-inspired dash with 7-inch GPS screen
Jeep
Jeep Sandstorm: 17-inch beadlock wheels and 39.5-inch BF Goodrich Krawler tires
Jeep
Jeep Sandstorm: KC Carbon series auxiliary front lights
Jeep
Jeep Sandstorm: 6.4-liter V8 engine from the Mopar catalog
Jeep
Jeep Sandstorm: vented carbon hood
Jeep
Jeep Jeepster: color scheme evokes the 1966 Jeepster
Jeep
Jeep Jeepster: spare tire is mounted indoors
Jeep
Jeep Jeepster: Oversized BF Goodrich 37" KO2 tires and beadlock-capable 17-inch rims
Jeep
Jeep Jeepster: 8,000 lumen offroad lights
Jeep
Jeep Jeepster: a bit of a Jeep Performance Parts showcase, with a 2-inch lift kit and chopped hardtop
Jeep
Jeep Jeepster: with a giant tire in the cabin, storage space has been added for tools and food and the like outside. A rear view camera sits between the storage packs
Jeep
Jeep Jeepster: winch and LED lights
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: nostalgia reigns
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: glovebox thumb button
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: rear window winder
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: side view
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: beefy steel rims
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: fuel cap
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: "the original luxury 4x4"
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: razor grille and logo
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: fresh front end
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: remember when headlights looked like this?
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: roof rack
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: original Oxblood bench seats
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: super clean dash
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: old-school speedo
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: original dash buttons
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: steering wheel with column shift
Jeep
Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: a throwback to the early days of luxury off-roading
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: chopped back body is 22 inches shorter than standard, on a standard wheelbase, meaning extreme approach angles to steep gradients are well and truly on the menu
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: very tasty lightweight rims
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: sits two inches higher on its suspension just thanks to weight reduction
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: tailgate with perforated aluminum
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: fuel filler is tucked away
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: carabinas on the cage rails
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: reupholstered seats fit the grey/electric blue color scheme
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: looks comfy to me
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: says Jeep on it
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: dash placard
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: small technical details bring this design to life
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: bare carbon looks great on the wheel arches
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: carbon hood helps save weight
Jeep
Jeep 4Speed: built for speed, but not by beefing up the engine. This is an ultra-lightweight concept
Jeep
Nacho Jeep: a "rolling catalog" for Mopar brand performance parts
Jeep
Nacho Jeep: oversized tires and satin-finished rims
Jeep
Nacho Jeep: heavy spare tire needed reinforced tailgate hinges to support it
Jeep
Nacho Jeep: contains picture of nacho.
Jeep
Nacho Jeep: open tube frame doors
Jeep
Nacho Jeep: a bucket of bolt-ons including a 2-inch riser kit
Jeep
Nacho Jeep: plenty of LED lighting
Jeep
Nacho Jeep: enough extra lighting to fry eggs at 30 paces
Jeep
Nacho Jeep: winch kit
Jeep
Nacho Jeep: hood is an aftermarket job to allow for a cold air intake kit
Jeep
Jeep B-Ute: starts out as a Jeep Renegade
Jeep
Jeep B-Ute: all-red taillights 
Jeep
Jeep B-Ute: says B-Ute on it
Jeep
Jeep B-Ute: apparently there's a connection to HALO
Jeep
Jeep B-Ute: custom seat trims
Jeep
Jeep B-Ute: also says Jeep on it
Jeep
Jeep B-Ute: custom hood with wider flares and heat extractors
Jeep
Jeep B-Ute: tactical-looking roof rack hardcase
Jeep
Jeep B-Ute: family comfort and a bit of extra off-road capability
Jeep
Jeep J-Wagon: urban getabout with off-road capability
Jeep
Jeep B-ute: interior
Jeep
Jeep J-Wagon: JPP center high-mount stop light gives extra visibility in the middle of the spare tire
Jeep
Jeep J-Wagon: slot-cut wheels in Brass Monkey finish
Jeep
Jeep J-Wagon: triangulated concept rock rails protect the exterior in harsh off-road conditions
Jeep
Jeep J-Wagon: hood latches get the Brass Monkey color treatment
Jeep
Jeep J-Wagon: 5-inch LED lights with JPP brackets
Jeep
Jeep J-Wagon: JPP hood has a cutout kit to fit the intake snorkel
Jeep
Jeep J-Wagon: mysteriously quotes the Konami code
Jeep
Jeep J-Wagon: premium styled concept split between luxury city driving and trail work
Jeep
View gallery - 79 images

It's Easter Safari time again in Moab, and that means it's time for Jeep to roll out another seven terrific concept vehicles to titillate the crowd. And again, they deliver, with a diverse range of obtuse angles on the classic American off-roader. Each of the seven boasts a different mix of custom touches and bolt-on aftermarket bits, either from the Jeep Performance Parts catalog, or made by Mopar.

Let's take a look.

Jeep Sandstorm: long-travel suspension and huge power rounds out its desert racing credentials
Jeep

Jeep Sandstorm

A Baja racer-inspired daily driver, the Sandstorm packs the meaty punch of a 6.4-liter V8, with a 6-speed manual shift. The custom suspension is long-travel (14" at the front, 18" at the rear), the bumpers and wheel arches are high, and the wheels themselves mean business: 17-inch beadlock rims with 39.5-inch BF Goodrich Krawler tires.

Aggressive venting on the carbon hood speaks to its performance potential, and the chopped rear gate with its lay-down spare tire complete the Baja race truck look. Practical touches include an integrated onboard air compressor, race-style fuel filler, offroad GPS and extra front lighting.

Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip: a throwback to the early days of luxury off-roading
Jeep

Jeep Wagoneer Roadtrip

Whooo-eee, she's a pearler. The Wagoneer ran from '63 to '91 and Jeep credits it with introducing the idea that luxury and 4x4 could live in harmony. The Roadtrip is built on a '65 model - gutted, naturally, and powered by a 5.7-liter V8 with a 4-speed auto.

The original engine didn't go to waste; the valve cover has been converted into a toolbox. The body's been stretched five inches, and custom fender flares accommodate a wider track thanks to 17-inch steel wheels and 33-inch tires. The team has slapped a razor-style front grille on the front, and the bottle-green paint scheme reminds me of the kind of cars my grandad used to drive.

The interior kicks the nostalgia into an even higher gear. Beautiful original oxblood bench seats, the tidy dash with its old-school speedo, and that steering wheel with column shifter, you can just about smell it. Lovely job.

Jeep 4Speed: chopped back body is 22 inches shorter than standard, on a standard wheelbase, meaning extreme approach angles to steep gradients are well and truly on the menu
Jeep

Jeep 4Speed

The 4Speed actually runs an eight speed auto transmission, but we'll give it a pass. It's all about weight reduction, removing and replacing the standard Wrangler bodywork with so much carbon fiber and perforated aluminum that it sits a full two inches higher on its suspension.

The look is absolutely badass, the blue/grey color scheme combining with bare carbon and a host of details to give it a super-technical feel, even if it also kinda looks like it should come with a free bunch of ridiculously goodlooking male models drinking orange mocha frappuccinos. The wheelbase is the same as standard, but the body's been chopped down a huge 22 inches so it's just about a wheel at each corner. This gives the 4Speed extreme approach angle capability when attacking steep gradients, but mainly makes it look as cool as anything I ever pulled out of my Matchbox car bucket as a kid.

The top's completely open, necessitating a custom electric blue roll cage and a very spiffy re-upholstering of the seats. It's not a roaring torque demon like many of the others, though – it showcases Jeep's new 2.0-liter inline four turbo engine instead. Makes sense, I guess, if you're focusing on light weight.

Jeep Jeepster: color scheme evokes the 1966 Jeepster
Jeep

Jeep Jeepster

Now that sounds like a name a six-year-old would call himself in a backyard action movie. It is, as you can tell by the lurid red and white paint job, one of a number of homages Jeep has made to the 1966 Jeepster Commando. Lifted 2 inches and chopped another two at the hardtop, this is a Jeep Performance Parts special based around a bunch of bolt-ons.

There's 8,000 lumens of LED trail lighting, including LED fog lamps on the bumper above the winch. The hood's a JPP catalog job, but the roll cage is pure custom. The wheels are 37-inch BF Goodrich KO2s, on 17-inch beadlock capable rims with a nice red ring painted on them.

Instead of bolting onto the back door, the spare comes inside the cabin, obliterating all luggage space and necessitating a pair of storage canisters on the back where you can stick small amounts of food, tools and whatever else you need to lug along.

Nacho Jeep: a "rolling catalog" for Mopar brand performance parts
Jeep

Nacho Jeep

Damn right that's nacho jeep, it's Jeep's Jeep. Built on a standard Wrangler Rubicon, the Nacho is a rolling parts catalog for Mopar's Jeep Performance Parts. Mopar has worked alongside the Jeep team creating factory-authorized aftermarket parts for many years now, and this car is veritably festooned. Festooned, I say.

The nacho yellow paint job? That's standard. Hood's not, though, it's a Mopar jigger designed to accommodate a cold air intake for the 2.0-liter turbo engine. There's a fresh satin black grille, a winch kit and a buttload of LED lighting fore and aft – the latter of which can be used to communicate trail conditions to drivers behind you.

Ground clearance is up thanks to a 2-inch lift kit, and mud-grubbing will be easier due to oversized 37-inch tires. The doors are open tube designs, the rear tailgate hinges are beefed up to handle the extra weight of a very fat spare tire, and the wheels are satin/carbon finished. That's the only mod on the whole car that's not a straight Mopar bolt-on.

Jeep B-Ute: starts out as a Jeep Renegade
Jeep

Jeep B-Ute

Though the name might evoke utility (as well as happy Australians), the B-Ute's looks speak more to comfort than rugged off-road action. Starting out from the Renegade platform, there are a few cosmetic changes to the bodywork, including custom front fascias and upper grille area and a hood with heat extractors in it and wider flares.

A 1.5-inch lift kit gives the B-Ute a bit more ground clearance, and a set of 30-millimeter offset 17-inch wheels and Baja champion tires assist with off-road capability. The interior is done up a bit with colored trim and inserts, and MOLLE systems on the backs of the front seats let you stick all sorts of stuff back there.

Jeep J-Wagon: premium styled concept split between luxury city driving and trail work
Jeep

Jeep J-Wagon

The name is perhaps a riff on the legendary Mercedes G-Wagen, but the similarly boxy J-Wagon starts life as a Wrangler Sahara, and gets a Warm Neutral Grey paint job that's a shade or two darker than the Granite Crystal Metallic of the standard model.

People seemed to like the Brass Monkey color wheels when Jeep showed them at SEMA in 2017, so there's Brass Monkey details all over this thing. The wheels, the hood latches, trim accents inside ... If Brass Monkey is your thing, there's plenty to enjoy here.

The JPP hood has been modified to allow a nice high intake snorkel out, the wheels are 35-inch KM3s from BF Goodrich, and the interior is done up in premium style with camel-color Katzkin leather seats.

There are a ton of photos in the gallery, and if that's not enough for you, you can check out last year's concepts, or the ones from 2016, or 2015, or 2013 ... Enjoy, and let us know which ones speak to you!

Source: Jeep

View gallery - 79 images
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • LinkedIn
2 comments
kelly23
The 4 Speed. Finally a reboot of the CJ5! Wouldn't want to take that thing down the highway, But it looks like it'd and perform great on the trail.
Nice job jeep.
Stepped into a friends 2017 4-door Rubicon the other day. Was shocked and saddened to see power windows. I guess the guys who had or wanted a Jeep when they were kids in the 80's finally get one in their 50's with all the modern creature comforts.
Josh!
Nacho Jeep! That thing looks awesome. I bet they wanted to call it TONKA Jeep though.