2006 Jeep Comander Limited 2wd 41,580 Miles 4.7 V/8 $14,500 on 2040-cars
Austin, Texas, United States
Up for sale is a beautiful 2006 Jeep Commander Limited 2WD with extremely low mileage for the year. The Commander has 41,580 miles and was owned by a female here in Central Texas. It was never smoked in and well taken care of by the family and is a one owner vehicle. The family is my
personal CPA and has bought several new Toyotas from me over the years. I now have ProCar Consulting Inc. in Austin, Texas and I traded for her 2006 Jeep and got her a new RAV4 2013. This Jeep Commander has full leather seating and can seat 7 passengers. The fuel economy is good
with the 4.7V/8 and the 2WD. It has a smooth Automatic 5 speed transmission and 4 wheel disc brakes. On board is factory Navigation system and day/night mirror with Blue Tooth Connect. Cruise Control and Dual Zone A/C works perfectly. The light gray interior is flawless and well taken care
of. No rips or tears and the carpet and headliner are spotless. The tires are Goodyear 20" and have 70% tread remaining. The wear pattern is even and rides with no vibration. Brakes are 65% and stop with no chatter and even braking. All electric windows and doors locks are operational including
the Electric Sunroof. This 2006 Jeep has never been wrecked or painted on and has a Perfect Car FAX record. I am offering the Jeep for sale locally in Austin, so let me know if your interested in knowing more about the Commander before the sale ends. I have priced the Jeep aggressively low
because I do not have dealership overhead and salesman commissions to pay. Clean NADA retail is $16,100 on 10/23/2013. KBB retail is $16,578 for good condition and $17,428 for Excellent Condition on 11/07/2013. I am selling the 2006 Commander for only $14,500. You can fly in and I will
pick you up at the Airport in Austin and you can drive her back home and still have the cheapest Limited and the lowest mileage Commander on Ebay or Auto Trader. Call me Jim Stienke 512-415-9582. Look at my web site porcarconsulting.org for my company and read about the testimonials
from my customers in Austin. I spent 30 years as a General Manager here with Lincoln and Toyota.
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Jeep in St. Louis hacked from Pittsburgh
Tue, Jul 21 2015One of America's most popular vehicles contains a security flaw that allows hackers to remotely commandeer it from anywhere on the planet. Cyber-security researchers Chris Valasek and Charlie Miller say they've accessed critical vehicle controls on a 2014 Jeep Cherokee that allowed them to remotely control critical vehicle functions like braking, transmission function, and steering. Automakers have downplayed the possibility a car could be remotely compromised, but the significance of the findings detailed Tuesday could cause them to reevaluate the threats posed to hundreds of thousands of vehicles already on the road. A key finding – the pair needed no physical access to the Jeep to pull off the attack. Valasek and Miller accessed the controls via a security hole in the Sprint cellular connection to Chrysler's UConnect infotainment system. In the course of their research, Valasek sat in his Pittsburgh home and remotely manipulated Miller's Jeep as he drove along a highway outside St. Louis. If you know a car's IP address, they say, a hacker could control it from anywhere. "We didn't add anything, didn't touch it," Valasek told Autoblog. "A customer could drive one of these things off a lot, and they'd have no clue it had these open attack surfaces." Remotely, he disabled brakes, turned the radio volume up, engaged windshield wipers and tampered with the transmission. Further, they could conduct surveillance on the Jeep, measuring its speed and tracking its whereabouts. They conducted the experiments over multiple breaches. They made their findings public on the same day the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the federal agency in charge of vehicle safety, released its latest report on the readiness of government and automakers to fend off these sorts of cyber attacks. Later today, two US Senators are expected to introduce legislation that would help consumers better understand the potential risks of car hacking. In the early stages of their research, Valasek and Miller found a security flaw in the car's wi-fi that allowed them to remotely manipulate controls from a range of about three feet. But in recent months, they found another vulnerability in the Sprint cellular connection in the UConnect system. That was a key breakthrough. "Lo and behold, we found we could communicate with this thing using cellular, and then more research, and 'Holy cow,' we're using the Sprint network to communicate with these vehicles," Valasek said.
Why Mopar won't release a factory lift kit for the new Jeep Cherokee
Thu, 24 Apr 2014The Jeep Cherokee Dakar concept showed off at the 2014 Easter Jeep Safari made a lot of online friends, even the Cherokee naysayers assenting that there's a monster Jeep underneath the Cherokee's skin if you're willing to go in and get it. But after reading Road & Track's write-up of what went into creating the Dakar, particularly its lift, you'll understand why you'll probably never see the components for it in the Jeep Performance Parts catalog.
The concept's press release mentions a "prototype Jeep Performance Parts lift kit, and additional suspension modifications." The short-story explanation is that the front struts on the standard Cherokee weren't engineered to accept any amount of lift, so the long story begins with the phrase, "an entirely new suspension." Head over to RT to read the details, and don't be afraid to ogle the Cherokee Dakar gallery and another awesome Jeep fancy that won't likely crawl over the hurdles imposed by production reality.
Side-X-Sides: The next Wrangler?
Wed, Feb 24 2016The Jeep Wrangler has a huge following, but I've long thought that it is ripe for plucking. And if rumors of a neo-Bronco prove to be true, it sounds like Ford may agree. If a new Bronco does pan out, I hope it's small like the original Bronco, and not a huge F-150-based vehicle. To be a true Wrangler-fighter it has to be small and nimble. Here's another option How about developing a slightly larger, but street-legal version of the popular side-x-sides which are so popular with hunters, fishermen, farmers and anyone outdoors-oriented? This, to me, seems to be the next logical evolution of these side-x-sides. Currently side-x-sides have to be either trailered or stuffed into the back a of a pickup to wherever they're going to be used. Offering a street-legal off-roader solves that problem. There's no shortage of side-x-side makers out there. Any one of them could engineer and market such a vehicle, should they decide to. Plus there are plenty of dealer outlets, although Honda is the only one that currently sells cars, etc.; so they could have an edge in the selling and servicing aspects of such a vehicle. That said, I'm not sure Honda would want to sell such a vehicle in their car outlets. It may be better suited to their dealers that sell motorcycles, ATVs, watercraft, etc., as that outdoorsman type of customer already frequents those dealers. Then again, if the new Ridgeline proves popular, such a vehicle could offer something much more capable and sporting to that customer who is looking for something more extreme. The Wrangler has its fans, and they love it just as it stands. In fact Wrangler fans would reject any drastic engineering changes to their beloved off-roaders Side-x-sides, on the other hand, offer a completely different take on how to engineer a small but serious off-roader. Both are valid approaches. Currently the only thing missing are street-legal side-x-sides that go head-to-head against the Wrangler. Having more purchase options available is always a good thing; seems like a no-brainer to me. Image Credit: Honda Jeep Off-Road Vehicles open road