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SoFlo Customs Reveals Custom ‘JTT’ Jeep Wrangler JL

The custom pickup will be limited to just 27 examples...

SoFlo Customs has announced the launch of two new models: the single-cab-modified Jeep Wrangler pickup truck, dubbed the “JTT,” and the world’s first new body style Ford Bronco pickup truck, nicknamed the “Stud.” Both have a starting price of $65,000, according to a press release announcing the models.

“We’re excited to introduce these one-of-a-kind vehicles to the pickup truck ravenous market,” said Joseph Ghattas, founder and CEO of SoFlo Customs and its sister company, Apocalypse Manufacturing. “These vehicles are just the tip of our creativity. At the end of the day, if I love driving it, then I’m sure my customers will too – that’s why I decided to put these builds into production.”

SoFlo Customs Reveals Custom 'JTT' Jeep Wrangler JL | THE SHOP

The JTT is a custom single-cab Jeep Wrangler JL pickup that pays homage to the Jeep Scrambler of yesteryear. The base of the donor four-door Wrangler remains intact, providing a desired wide footprint, while the two rear seats and trunk become home to an almost 5-foot pickup bed, with a 2-by-2-foot built-in hidden storage compartment and an all-aluminum chase rack.

The vehicle’s modern technology includes a full-service infotainment center with Apple CarPlay, back-up camera, Bluetooth, adaptive cruise control and an aux switch pod for complete exterior light control.

The JTT offers an array of customization options, including exterior paint (both high gloss and off-road armor), interior color/pattern and rim/tire selection (20- and 22-inch rims, 37-, 38- and 40-inch tires). SoFlo Customs can build the JTT using a turbocharged diesel that churns out almost 500 pound-feet of torque, or one of two powerful HEMI V8s – the 485-horsepower 392 and 717-horsepower supercharged Hellcat.

The JTT is reminiscent of the fabled Jeep single-cab pickup vehicles of the past, with only 30,000 made over a 6-year run, yet the modern-day construction is the first of its kind that is for sale, the company notes. Only 27 JTT models will ever be built leaving collectors scrambling to get their hands on the last 25 of them, two having been already sold and delivered.

Pat Curtin

Pat Curtin is the managing editor of THE SHOP magazine.

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