
The Jeep Renegade Concept is the third of Chrysler's concept vehicles unveiled at the Detroit Auto Show. Yes, it is the same as that Halo-looking contraption that Vines told us about, kind of, back in November. A 1.5-liter three-cylinder BLUETEC diesel engine is what this vehicle is sporting in a very green manner in addition to a 40-mile lithium ion battery. It lacks any kind of roof or enclosing feature, but that isn't anything to worry about. The minimalist interior can be hosed down and a floor-board drain prevents any kind of flooding. If you're wondering what those two cylinders are on the back — it's scuba packs, you know, for the avid spontaneous scuba goer.
BLUETEC diesel Range Extended Electric Vehicle in fun, open-air, sustainable design package
A B-segment Jeep® concept vehicle, the Renegade is a sporty, "minimized" two-seater ideally suited for the all-weather fun of dune-surfing or rock-crawling."With an electric motor powering each axle, the Jeep Renegade concept is designed for a 'hang on and have fun experience,'" said Tony Shamenkov, Jeep Renegade concept principal exterior designer.
Constructed of environmentally responsible materials, sustainability is a key theme of the Jeep Renegade concept.
Renegade is targeted at customers in the "Stylish Green" segment of the marketplace - those who are extremely environmentally oriented, appreciate high-tech and innovation, and enjoy performance combined with style in keeping with their "green" attitude.
Jeep Renegade Concept Technology
The advanced propulsion system in the Jeep Renegade concept starts with a 40-mile lithium-ion battery pack. A range extender - in Renegade's case, a small-displacement (1.5-liter, 3-cylinder) BLUETEC diesel engine - allows for journeys beyond 40 miles. In fact, the Jeep Renegade concept boasts a 400-mile range.
Renegade's BLUETEC diesel engine generates an additional 115 horsepower when needed, while greatly reducing exhaust emissions when compared to standard gasoline engines. Renegade is capable of achieving an equivalent petroleum fuel economy of 110 miles per gallon, which is four-to-five times greater than an equivalent gasoline-only vehicle.
The all-new Jeep Renegade concept's lightweight aluminum architecture and regen-braking system help to improve overall efficiency, while dual electric 200 kilowatt (268 horsepower) motors propel a very capable 4x4 system - complete with low range and locking differentials — worthy of carrying the Jeep name.
Jeep Renegade Concept ExteriorThe Jeep Renegade concept's "one-with-nature" personality is emphasized by its large, flaring wheel openings, oversized wheels and tires, and cut-down speedster windshield — all of which combine to deliver on the Renegade's promise of cross-country fun and agility.
Among the unique exterior details are "deconstructed" rubber-clad headlamps and taillamps, as well as just-for-fun elongated triangular openings in each of the two sculpted doors.
While the Renegade features a roll bar, it has no top. Instead, the cargo deck just behind the cockpit can be fitted with a variety of "lids." Options include a plain lid, or lids configured to accommodate the gear of a particular outdoor day-trip activity, such as mountain biking or kayaking. Or it can come "as built" — with formations designed to accommodate two matching water scooters with open storage underneath. Fluid-fill caps, a plug-in port and a first-aid kit are also included.
Jeep Renegade Concept InteriorSustainability - a ratio between the energy needed to build and ship the vehicle as compared with the impact these processes have on the environment - is a key focus of the Jeep Renegade concept's interior design.
Materials used in constructing the Jeep Renegade concept were deliberately selected to be environmentally responsible, both in manufacture and end-of-vehicle-life recyclability.
Innovative construction includes one-piece molded soy-based foam seats and doors, a one-piece co-molded instrument panel with a urethane skin, a co-molded aluminum/silicone steering wheel, a one-piece molded chassis created without using environmentally-harmful resins, and a one-piece molded interior compartment "tub." This environmental care in designing the Renegade's interior is aligned with Jeep's "harmony with nature" philosophy.
"The Jeep Renegade concept's interior — actually the entire vehicle — is designed to minimize the number of parts necessary for assembly and function," said Scott Anderson, principal interior designer of the Renegade concept. "We designed the Renegade with an eye toward simplification of systems, both in parts and processes."
The HVAC system, for example, is not coolant-based, while the color, grain and gloss of the interior parts are molded in one piece. Even the no-gloss exterior color of the Renegade's lightweight composite body is molded in to avoid the use of solvents present in automotive paints.
The dual-cockpit instrument panel is symmetrically balanced for easy "plug and play" left-hand drive and right-hand drive applications. There is no conventional wiring. Instead, the instrument panel features wireless electronics in sealed, self-contained units, removable by the customer. The panel is built about an exposed cross-car beam containing an integrated power strip, and on the passenger side, yaw, pitch and roll indicators (also built into the fluid-fill gauges). The instrument panel itself is hollow, allowing ample open storage below the beam. Separately-configured impact-absorbing vinyl-wrapped knee-blockers "float" beneath the cross-car beam.
The thin multi-plane acrylic instrument cluster mounts to the steering column, while the similar but separate center control screen mounts on a swivel base — providing easy access to both occupants.
Located at the intersection of the steering wheel's T-shaped spokes, the circular LED screen rotates, allowing the driver to select the drive mode, while a flattened rim provides roomier thigh clearance. A driver air bag is concealed beneath the screen. Red or green translucent shift buttons allow Park, Reverse or Drive selections.
The Jeep Renegade concept's sporty doors incorporate unique canvas-pull remote "handles," while the rush of the moving landscape visible through the door's elongated openings enhance the feeling of carefree, open-air mobility.
The Renegade's contoured, figure-form seats — covered in scuba-like waterproof materials that are both soft-touch and flexible — feature in-seat belts and unusual, hollow, lightweight upside-down "U-shaped" headrests. The seats feature a urethane skin with soy-based foam co-molded with a composite substructure. The integral seatbelts, along with slender accent strips on the seats and instrument panel, repeat the Palm Metallic exterior color.
A "thermal unit" in the center console plugs into the electrical battery pack, permitting food to be either heated or cooled.
"Inspired by the simplicity and functionality of scuba diving gear, we wanted the interior of the Jeep Renegade concept to be weather-tight and durable," Anderson said.
The Renegade's wireless interior is designed to be hosed down. It features a drain in the floor, while the formations built into the floor mat are designed to channel water to the opening. Hollow-section billet-formed pedals float above the tub floor.
Fun, functional and fabricated from recyclable materials, the Jeep Renegade concept offers agile, capable performance without sacrificing the environment its drivers seek to explore. Keeping with Jeep owners' desire to use their vehicles as an extension of their active lives, the Jeep Renegade concept promotes enjoyment of the good things of the earth while taking care of its future.
Jeep Renegade Concept Vehicle SpecificationsVehicle Type Range-extended Electric Vehicle (40-mile all-electric range with diesel range extender)
Two-passenger, open-air
Weight and Dimensions
Weight/GVWR 3150 lbs./3600 lbs.
Length 153.0 inches/3885mm
Width at H-point 62.9 inches/1598mm
Height 56.3 inches/1431mm
Wheelbase 101.6 inches/2580mm
Front overhang 25.0 inches/634mm
Rear overhang 26.4 inhces/671mm
Track front/rear 62.2 inches/1580mm
Approach angle 44.0 degrees
Departure angle 52.0 degrees
Breakover angle 32.0 degrees
Turn circle 35 feet/10.7m
Maximum width 71.4 inches/1814mmPowertrain and Suspension
Layout Four wheel drive with low range and locking differentialsMotor Dual electric
Power: 200 kW (268 hp) x 2
Regenerative brakingBattery 16 kWh Li-ion battery pack
Range extender 1.5-liter, 3-cylinder diesel
Fuel volume 10 gallons
Suspension Front - SLA
Rear - Multi-linkWheels and Tires
Tire size front/rear 235/65R20x7.5 inches 32.1 inches/814mm
Tire manufacturer BF GoodrichColor Scheme
Exterior Palm Metallic
Interior BlackKey Performance Attributes
0-60 mph 8.5 seconds
Standing ¼ mile 13.6 seconds
Top speed 90 mph
All-electric range 40 miles
Total range 400 miles
Fuel economy 110 mpg (combined, est.)














Comments
Correction: THIS is the dumbest piece of crap I've ever seen...and I've seen that new Fisker, the G-Wiz, The Weber, and the Merc F700.
Jeep invents a... hey, why does it look like a VW dune buggy?
Please put that drivetrain in a vehicle we can actually buy. Say, a Wrangler?
This is where concepts begin to piss me off. They trot out something that is 3 or 4 generations ahead of the current offerings, while they haven't even put the EXISTING diesel into the Wrangler (or much of the rest of the product lines).
It reeks of green bandwagonism.
I prefer the Hummer HX, honestly.
This one is better...
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I'm so sick of this hybrid and battery crap. It doesn't help that every single one of these Chrysler concepts looks like a 10 year old concept.
Are those doors or ear canals?
To hell with this thing, gimme that Hurricane thingy they had a few years back that could spin-a-roony in one spot.
I love the powertrain concept, but why expand on the very crappy, hated, and proven-to-be-unsuccessful design language of the Compass? Jeeps are blocks. Square corners, flat fenders, removeable body panels.
I've heard people talk about Hummer out-Jeeping Jeep eventually, but this year they have definitely done it with the HX vs the E-Meyers Manx.
Kermit the Frog, your car has arrived.
Reminds me of the Isuzu Vehicross, but with T-tops or something.
Or maybe I'm thinking of the Civic Del Sol...
Anyone else getting tired of scrolling through footlong press releases to get the comments?
I just threw up in my mouth at first glance, but looking at this again just made me throw up all over myself.
Sigh, slap this powertrain in a Wrangler-ish body and they'd have something, a huge step in the right direction. But instead it's stuck in a wildly impractical concept.
I bought one of those 30 years ago when they were called Meyers Manxes.
Rebel flag tail lights?
Jeep appear to be playing the Jaguar game of creating a string of concept cars, and then studiously ignoring them and piling the same old boring crap into the showrooms...
man didnt Powerwheels come out this beforehand?
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doh kids are getting the cool stuff
@Rust-MyEnemy: Very true. Most of the time these concepts are far too extreme for being a real sales getter, like the Hurricane. What's really chaffing though is when realistic concepts like the Gladiator get oh so very close to production then some asshat exec squashes it. Fortunately it looks very possible that some of the Trailhawk concept from last year might be close to what we could see out of the next Grand Cherokee.
This thing though? Just another Willy's concept all over again. Totally bleh.
I totally agree that this is a failure as a concept. It either went too far or not far enough.
The Hurricane was perfectly absurd. Over the top enough to hint at nothing, and completely kick-ass.
While 110mpg is impressive, they need to quit building sub-Wrangler sporty runabout vehicles (aka little girlie cars). The X-90 failed for a reason.
We want a diesel Wrangler, we want Dana 60s, and we want a Gladiator pickup.
No pics of the remote control unit?
1.5 liter, 3 cylinder, BLUESMOKE diesel engine...
I hope they Renege on this.
It looks like a cross between a Meyers Manx, a Wrangler and an Austin Healey Sprite, but not in a good way.
I wish everyone would piss off with these parallel hybrid powertrains. Either go series like Fisker, or just put in a small diesel and be done with it. Hybrids are a stopgap anyway. Fuel cells are the future.
Odd concept dune buggy. What's the point?
@combat chuck: Oh, those are press releases?
This looks like a golf cart on steroids.
And it looks like cheap plastic.
Pretty soon there'll just be four HUGE tires and a tiny little platform with seats slung between them about axle high.
No one else remembers the 1988 Pontiac Stinger??
This is too blatant a ripoff to even believe.
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(sorry... I can't let this one go)
I think those scuba tanks are there because it might rain and you know, that whole "no roof" thing might not work to well in those sorts of situations.
I think I've seen this concept before. And it looks outdated already.
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