I cannot believe what my eyes are seeing right now. This build by Nevada-based Jacob Collis involved cutting off the rear section of a first-gen Jeep Grand Cherokee’s roof and turning it into a pickup truck. But while hacking the roof off a unibody SUV is already a strange and questionable thing to do, the truck-ification of the Jeep isn’t the weird part — what’s weird is that Collis reinforced the unibody by welding on sail pillars from a first-gen Honda Ridgeline. Yes, you read that right.
We’ve seen so many strange build projects here on The Autopian that it really takes something special to get me bang on my keyboard, and this automotive Frankenstein, called by its maker the “Jenda GrandRidgeline Wagoneer,” absolutely qualifies, mostly because it makes absolutely no sense while at the same time making a tiny bit of sense. Hear me out.
A Jeep Grand Cherokee is a unibody vehicle, meaning that, instead of having a separate passenger-holding body bolted to a frame that handles the majority of the chassis loads, there’s just one single body designed to handle it all. Integrating the vehicle’s overall load-bearing structure into the body itself allows for more interior volume, better overall stiffness, weight-savings, and various other advantages. What it also does is make modifications to the body hugely problematic, whereas on a body-on-frame vehicle you could hack the body up all day and let the frame handle the loads.
For the longest time, pretty much all pickup trucks were body-on-frame only, since a roofless truck bed is hard to make stiff; sticking with a strong ladder under the bed to take up the loads just made sense. But then came the Honda Ridgeline, which eschewed the frame for a fully unibody design. How exactly did Honda build a frameless pickup truck that could handle the bending and torsion loads that a truck would see? Well, Honda engineers installed “sail pillars” to each side of the vehicle. That’s these:
If the concept looks familiar, it may be because the newly-released Tesla Cybertruck uses sail pillars to provide sufficient stiffness to handle road/towing loads:
These sail pillars (also called sail panels) are meant to tie the rear of the truck — where the loads come in via the trailer hitch and via the rear suspension — in with the roof, thus creating a larger moment of inertia to resist torsion and bending.
Maybe you can see where this is going. If cutting a unibody Jeep Grand Cherokee’s roof leads to structural concerns, and Honda fixed structural concerns on its unibody truck by incorporating sail pillars, then couldn’t one solve the Jeep’s problems by just installing the Honda’s sail pillars?
This is an absolutely outlandish thought. It doesn’t work like that! Those pillars have to be integrated into the original design, with Finite Element Analysis and all sorts of other simulations/tests done to make sure it all works together as a system, and it has to be welded into the structure just right. You can’t just stitch one truck’s sail pillars into a hacked up SUV and expect it to solve your bending/torsion problems!
Still, maybe it could help a little to tie that rear end together, and the idea of it is just so bafflingly absurd that I cannot help but absolutely love Collis’s build. “The idea originally came from this man out in New Zealand … the man who made [a pickup Jeep Grand Cherokee ZJ],” Collis told me over Facebook Messenger. “The problem is, if you look at this truck’s further photos you begin to see … where the piece on the back came from. It’s a fiberglass shell from a boat on the back, with a window panel placement and cutout,” he told me.
“When preparing the cut I took noticed of some of Jeep’s ZJ design features for an anti-taco [i.e. folding] effect. Should the B and C and D pillar ever wind up cut, they’re not compatible with a full fiberglass rear firewall,” he said. “The motor in these is usually a 5.2, and it has enough torque to twist and contort the body, even though it’s a unibody vehicle. And with the rear gone, I lost downward weight displacement in the rear because of the lack of a rear back.” I’m assuming he means that lack of a rear structure made the truck lose rigidity/strength needed to carry/haul loads or to go off-road.
“So to get the truck effect and give it some ability to retain its older safety feats, I gave it a full rear fire wall of an ’07 Honda ridgeline,” he continued.
The profile screams Isuzu Amigo . . .
Thought the same, not shade though, I really dug the looks of the Amigo.
Same. I do admire this guy’s fortitude. But life’s too short. Just go find an old Amigo and redo the engine/frame stuff.
That’s the ” prison tats ” of welding right there. Bonus points for the Rat Fink and Deora references though .
As they say in Minnesota: Well, that’s different.
That also means, well, that’s weird…
Bless his heart
That boy ain’t right…
Indeed. Gloriously so.
I’ll tell you hhwat
I so desperately wish I still had the time to do fun things like this. Alas, as I’ve grown older I have acquired a lot of skills for which I have no time to put to use. Perhaps someday.
The struggle is real!
Maybe the best skill of all is knowing what not to do.
So true!
Probably was a lot of fun, but now he just has a much less reliable Ridgeline
I guess I don’t know enough about off roading, but is there no way to increase the capability of a Ridgeline to rival the ZJ? I guess the Ridge doesn’t have a real 4WD system right? Problem #1 I imagine.
3 time Ridgeline owner checking in here. Currently have a 2013 RL in my fleet.
You can do a few things to bump up the Ridgeline’s off road capability, but it is really never going to be more than a soft-roader. The real weakness isn’t the unibody construction, it is really the driveline layout. A transverse engine transmission orientation, and a 4WD system that is basically front wheel drive until it detects wheel slippage, not exactly the stuff that off road dreams are made of. Add no solid axles and very limited articulation, bad approach and departure angles, I could go on.
I love my RL for what it is, but I also know what it is not. Its 4WD system is good for what it does, but it was never designed to be the basis for a hard core off-roader.
I was mostly teasing, but I do think it’s not the best use of time and energy. The ZJ is a pile, and there’s little to convince me otherwise. Couple other donors that I can think of that would have been wiser. Still a neat project though!
I love everything about this, haha.
I actually intend to do this to a Kia Sportage. but I would build a structural cage to go along with the sail panels to keep my little car from folding in half. in other news would anyone like to donate a kia sportage to me, my brother blew up the engine AND transmission on my last one. so it has gone off to the scrap pile
> my brother blew up the engine AND transmission on my last one. so it has gone off to the scrap pile
Your brother is the one who should go off to the scrap pile.
it had 280k miles on it and he was doing the same thing I would have with it. he was trying to get up a pretty steep hill on a 4×4 trail that many stock jks cant do. I don’t blame him at all for it, i just would have pulled more parts off it before sending it to get scrapped.
it dropped a valve and ate a gear in the automatic transmission. also should note it was a 2.4l 4speed automatic front wheel drive sportage. Not the car to do these things in, but the most fun to do these things in.
Mr Jacob, I love your vision and its forthright execution. Ed Roth, yeah! He had visions and made them real!
I love it purely for the effort and the wacky nature of it. Also, I need a set of those rims or the similar Wrangler ones to go on my D100!
Good luck fitting 4.5×5 wheels on a d100.
Anytime DT says “Hear me out”, I bust out the popcorn
“Some men see things as they are and ask why. Others dream things that never were and ask why not” — George Bernard Shaw
“Others still contemplate things others have done and ask why the fuck they would commit such offenses against taste and sensibility.” — OJ Simpson
Wow. That looks awful. I’m surprised I dislike it as much as I do, especially considering I almost unironically liked this monstrosity:
https://www.theautopian.com/someone-combined-a-ford-excursion-with-a-volkswagen-new-beetle-and-made-this-v10-powered-monster/
I prefer the Ridgeline. And I hate Ridgelines.
Still, kudos to this guy for having a goofy idea and making it happen.
This Bishop design is far better executed.
https://www.theautopian.com/our-daydreaming-designer-imagines-hes-david-tracy-buying-a-holy-grail-1987-jeep-truck-that-never-existed/
Or the SWG Ute Project
The theme from “Justified” was running through my head while I read this.
I got Dueling Banjos.
The line where he mentions working on this project while his wife was in labor, idk if I should be surprised or not?
That was a weird throwaway mention! But both of my labors stretched over 2 days (lol), so maybe he had plenty of time?
Decent idea, flawed execution, needs a lot more bodywork including a ton of bondo… actually on second thought, that bondo will crack immediately the second it starts twisting off-road. Yeah I don’t know how to salvage that.
DAP. Lots of DAP.
I’m still working on the “why” when the Comanche is a thing that exists.
Well part of it is that nice Comanches are like 10k, and modifying a nice Comanche to wheel the snot out of is very heretical.
Yes, I’d love a nice Comanche, but that is because I primarily want it for “small truck stuff” more than offroading. It is just a really great size in my book, low load floor, etc.
I’m also not going to go do my own welding like this guy. So “nice” to a guy who is unafraid of welding 1/4 of a Honda onto his Jeep is probably different than my definition of nice.
Yeah Comanches are great little pickups around town. Significantly lower load floor than my f150
Is it normal to feel sorry for a car?
Well, that looks, um, different.
This equal parts stupid and amazing. I love people who have this kind of will. I’m just glad they don’t live next to me.
So he turned a jeep into a Brat?
Somewhere a TUV inspector cries.
That’s a lot of work for a low payoff
Hell, he got featured on the world’s premier automotive website. I’d say that was worth it.
‘merica, fuck yeah. Not my kind of project, but I’ll drink a beer with this guy and listen to his next crazy project idea anytime.
Agreed. I find it ugly as heck and completely silly. But I will happily support each person doing silly things to their own cars as long as it’s still road safe (or driven off-road only).