Screenshot : Coyote Works YouTube

In late August, a YouTube vlogger recording a fun little expedition out in Oregon ended up stuck in the middle of nowhere, helplessly watching his 2013 Jeep Wrangler turn into a huge fireball. He filmed the whole thing, and the resulting video is just bizarre.




What makes the video so strange is just how dramatically the tone changes. It begins as just a dude in his 2013 Jeep Wrangler filming himself on some dirt roads in the eastern Oregon desert. He stops by his favorite western-style general store, cruises down a side road to check out an abandoned homestead, discusses the local obsidian rocks and how native Americans used to use them to make tools, and he even talks about how he’s been on a coconut milk kick lately.

The whole thing really does start out supremely light, and perhaps a bit dorky. But then bad things happen. Quickly:

As you can see in the video above titled “The Day My Jeep Rubicon Burns To The Ground,” host of the Coyote Works YouTube channel, Casey Kaiser, was driving down the shoulder of Oregon’s Glass Buttes towards a flat valley when he ran into a dead end, and had to backtrack for a couple of hours.


After taking a short break to quell his frustrations, Kaiser found a flat valley, and while looking for a place to set up camp, he arrived at a gate. To open it, he shut off his Jeep’s Pentastar 3.6-liter V6 and hopped out. Then—seemingly out of nowhere, with allegedly no warning lights having indicated an issue—Kaiser noticed smoke coming from the hood of his JK:

Screenshot : Coyote Works YouTube

He popped the hood and found that flames appeared to be coming from between the motor and the firewall. So Kaiser sprung into action, grabbed his fire extinguisher and some water, and went to put out the blaze. But sadly, he had no luck; the fire continued burning, especially after making it through the firewall and into the interior.

Kaiser then gave up on saving his Jeep, and instead focused on retrieving the survival gear inside of it. He popped open the rear door and took the important stuff out, only then to say perhaps one of the sadder quotes I’ve ever heard a Jeeper say: “So, I’m probably just gonna camp here and watch it burn.”


Photo : Casey Kaiser Gofundme

And that’s pretty much what Kaiser ended up doing, though he did have to break out a shovel to throw dirt on flames to prevent them from creating a brush fire—a responsible move on his part.


At one point, with darkness having fallen and the Jeep’s fire roaring high into the sky, Kaiser actually looks relaxed, sitting on his camping chair and telling viewers just how good that coconut milk tastes.

Screenshot : Coyote Works YouTube


In the end, Kaiser used his GPS app to show a friend where he was, and by early the next morning, he made it off the trail sans an immolated 2013 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon, which a wrecker picked up five days later. You can watch that recovery here.

Photo : Casey Kaiser Gofundme


I sent Kaiser an email to ask about the experience, and whether the vehicle had any modifications. He told me that the only mods were the wheels, tires, rooftop tent, roof rack, fuel/water can mounts, and an awning. So really, nothing much that would logically contribute to the Jeep catching fire.

He told me that the fire started out of nowhere after a few hours of low-speed, sub-30 mph driving on some desert two-track roads in four-wheel drive.


“There was no warning or indication of anything amiss with the Jeep,” Kaiser, who runs the YouTube channel filled with off-road expeditions in his Jeep Wrangler, told me over email. “No warning lights had come on in the dash, the temp gauge was reading normal, and the vehicle was driving perfectly as far as I could tell.”



He did tell me that some folks think dry grass (which the video shows Kaiser driving over a few times) may have gotten caught near the exhaust or catalytic converter. Though he’s not ruling it out as the cause of the fire, Kaiser is doubtful, since he said the flames appeared to be coming from the top rear of the motor.


Based on the fire having started in this area, he says, “seems to me more like it would have been something electrical, fuel, or transmission fluid related.”

In his follow-up video, Kaiser does imply that a recall was perhaps a player, here. So I checked with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, or NHTSA, and found that 2013 model year Wranglers were covered by two recalls related to fires.


The first one deals with a power steering tube possibly rubbing a hole into a transmission cooler line. As FCA writes in its owner notification letter, “A loss of transmission fluid could cause transmission damage and if the leaking transmission fluid comes in contact with an ignition source, cause an underbody fire.” But looking at NHTSA remedy instructions, and at forum threads on the topic, the potential transmission line wear point appears to be well ahead of the back of the engine, where Kaiser said his Jeep’s fire appears to have started. The second fire-related recall covering 2013 Wranglers has to do with corrosion in an exterior heated mirror yielding an electrical short—this seems like it’s probably not too relevant in this case.

So really, nobody knows at this point why this particular Wrangler decided to char itself. We’ve written about all sorts of cars catching fire for various reasons (and we’ve even written a reminder that cars catch on fire “Like All The Time”) so it’ll be interesting to see what the cause of this ends up being.


“FCA vehicles meet or exceed all federal safety mandates. Safety is paramount at FCA. I am unaware of this event, ” Fiat Chrysler spokesperson Eric Mayne told us over the phone when asked for comment.

h/t: Zachary