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Models
- (-) Remove Renegade filter Renegade
Parts
- (-) Remove Link Arm filter Link Arm
- Ball Joint (7) Apply Ball Joint filter
- CV Gaiter Inner (3) Apply CV Gaiter Inner filter
- CV Gaiter Outer (3) Apply CV Gaiter Outer filter
- Doseur Valves (3) Apply Doseur Valves filter
- Rear Beam (3) Apply Rear Beam filter
- Rear Stabilizer Bar (3) Apply Rear Stabilizer Bar filter
- Rear Tie Bar (3) Apply Rear Tie Bar filter
- Replacement Wishbone Parts | Used, Second-Hand Wishbone (3) Apply Replacement Wishbone Parts | Used, Second-Hand Wishbone filter
- Steering Box (3) Apply Steering Box filter
- Steering Idler (3) Apply Steering Idler filter
- Steering Lock & Key (3) Apply Steering Lock & Key filter
- Steering Pulley (3) Apply Steering Pulley filter
- Suspension Leg Strut (3) Apply Suspension Leg Strut filter
- Suspension Spheres (3) Apply Suspension Spheres filter
- Suspension Strut (3) Apply Suspension Strut filter
- Top Ball Joint (7) Apply Top Ball Joint filter
- Torsion Bar (3) Apply Torsion Bar filter
- Track Rod End (3) Apply Track Rod End filter
- Upper Ball Joints (7) Apply Upper Ball Joints filter
Used Jeep Suspensions
All used Jeep Suspensions listed on Breakeryard.com are tested, original (OEM) manufacturer parts and come with a 14 day money back guarantee. Breakeryard.com list cheap new OES or aftermarket car parts at discounted prices and used OEM car parts up to 80% cheaper than main dealer prices for Jeep from premium breaker yards from across the UK.
Jeep trivia
- Jeep has had eight different owners to date. The current owners of the iconic brand are Fiat-Chrysler, but the name has been owned by recognisable names like Renault and AMC.
- The original Jeep was designed in only two days! The prototype took 75 days to be built and then delivered to the US army that had commissioned the vehicle.
- One of the most expensive Jeeps in the world is the 2005 Jeep Hurricane. It's certainly not a cheap option if you're in the market for a Jeep unless, of course, you've got a spare £2 million in the bank.
- Jeeps have been seen on the big screen a lot, especially in war films. However, it's not just war that is responsible for iconic Jeep designs in cinema. Jurassic Park used a '93 Jeep Wrangler Sahara for the vehicles used in the dino-park, and the most iconic scene showed the Jeep outrunning a T-Rex! There's even a car club called the Jurassic Park Motor Pool, where members have to own a Jeep that has been painted to look like it's come straight from the park.
- Jeeps have a distinctive flat slotted grill, but it's actually Ford that designed this part. Originally, the grill consisted of 13 slots, but by 1945 the number had dropped to seven.