![]() I am satisfied with this car since I really like the Jeep brand and the issues mentioned are minor for me but the unreliability and bad value of lower tier models might be a turn off for those who have no love for the Jeep badge. Strangely the daytime running lights are filaments while the ENTIRE industry uses LEDs, just another astounding design choice. The placement of the touchscreen itself is a bit low, requiring you to look away from the road too much. The reverse camera is wide enough with steering guidelines but the resolution is awful. The 8.4 inch display is also standard in the Limited up, with lower two models getting a 5 inch display without Android and Apple phone mirroring, which is astounding considering the Koreans give it in their base models. Also at the price point I would at least expect blind spot monitoring to be standard but its only available in an option package. Luckily nothing serious has broken down yet. The parking sensors just stopped working for no reason after a couple of months, which should not be happening in such a brand name car. Beats speakers are awesome and is definitely the highlight of this car, subwoofer delivers base that literally vibrates me! The biggest downside though is the reliability of this tech. Easy to call contacts from the screen and voice calls are clear. Infotainment system is pretty good, maintains good connection with phone via Bluetooth and Android Auto. Rear window might be a bit small for some and rear pillars are pretty thick. LED lights in the interior instead of normal filaments would also have been befitting of the price. Really Jeep? For 45,000 dollars though I wish Jeep put in a powered tailgate and seat folding buttons in the boot, as you have to walk around to the front to fold them manually and the tailgate is pretty hard to pull down with one hand. Again in strange cost cutting measures the rear doors handles are not illuminated but the front ones are. There is a USB port in the front and back, and all buttons are ambient lit in the night. ![]() Heated front seats are especially useful during Canberra winters and the air conditioner has no trouble cooling down the cabin during summer. ![]() How much did Jeep save with that, five dollars off the price? Even when the front seats are in my driving position I have legroom in the back, headroom is not an issue for me in any seat. For some odd reason only the front doors have soft touch material in the top while rear doors have hard plastic. The leather on the seats and armrests is nice and the dash is covered in soft touch materials. Unfortunately haven't taken this car off road yet but it does have 4x4 lock and modes for different terrains. Steering is nice and light for easy handling and I don't feel much rolling around the corners. Suspension is good and only a little bit of wind noise can be heard in the cabin. Nine speed transmission is smooth and quick shifting, have not encountered any hesitation from it during driving. I say the economy is pretty damn good in the diesel! If you are sitting at the front you will very much hear the rattly diesel when accelerating but cruising is quiet and relaxed. I cant imagine what the real world economy of the petrol would have been considering manufacturer's claim of 9.7l/100km. City driving however gave disappointing economy of 8.3l/100km, which is way less than Jeep's claim of 5.7l/100km. ![]() Performance is what you would expect from a diesel, a bit slow to get up to speed but holds that speed at low rpms, making it very economical on the highway (consumption goes below 5l/100 km). In driving and ownership for 9 months though it's been a bit of a mixed bag. I bought this car because I always wanted to own and drive a Jeep, and the diesel Compass ticked every box on paper. ![]()
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