Jeep Just Recalled a Million Wranglers and Gladiators for Catching Fire, and There's No FixJeep just told more than a million Wrangler and Gladiator owners that their vehicles carry a fire risk, and the part that should worry people most is what the company admitted right alongside it. There is no fix available yet.The recall covers over a million Wranglers and Gladiators. The problem lives in the wiring for the steering pump, and Jeep has flagged it as a fire risk. That is not a squeak or a rattle or a check engine light owners can shrug off until the next service visit. Wiring that can catch fire is the kind of defect that turns a parked vehicle into a problem and a moving one into a worse problem.Here's the part that matters. A recall usually comes with a remedy. You get the notice, you take the vehicle in, a dealer replaces or repairs the bad part, and the risk goes away. This time the notice is going out before the answer exists. Jeep has identified the danger but has not yet found the way to make it stop.AdvertisementAdvertisementThat gap is where owners are stuck. They have been told their truck or SUV might catch fire, and they have not been told how to make that not happen. For a Wrangler or Gladiator owner who relies on that vehicle every day, that is a hard spot to be left in, holding a problem with no solution attached.A million-plus vehicles is not a small batch either. It is a huge slice of two of Jeep's most popular and most loved nameplates, the kind of vehicles enthusiasts build their weekends and their wallets around. A safety defect at that scale, with no remedy on the table, is exactly the situation that erodes trust between an automaker and the people who keep buying its products.The open question now is simple and uncomfortable. How long do more than a million owners wait, sitting on a known fire risk, before Jeep actually has something to offer them?Join our Newsletter, follow our Instagram page, and connect with us on Facebook.