Willys Jeep Project

  1. Welcome to 6x6 World.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us. Looking forward to seeing you in the forums and talking about AATVs!
+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 3 1 2 3 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 27

Thread: Willys Jeep Project

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Location
    Shipshewana Indiana
    Posts
    350

    Willys Jeep Project

    I thought you would all enjoy to see my Willys restoration. Last year I was working on a 3d model of a Willys MB for a vehicle simulator, and while searching for reference pictures I came across a few Craigslist ads. I couldn't believe how cheap it was to get into one, considering I was about to spend a few hundred on my r/c crawler for simple upgrades. So I figured it would be more fun to get a real 4x4. A genuine military Jeep is quite expensive and I didn't want to ruin one on the trail. On May 7th, 2014 I found a 1952 CJ3A for sale in Illinios, the price seemed decent and it looked good in pictures. He told me a guy was coming that Friday to buy it, so my grandpa and I pulled a 2am road trip on Thursday to go pick it up.

    Upon arrival we found the clutch was destroyed, the body was more bondo than metal (not a straight line either), and the tranny needed rebuilt. We planned on going to Bundy Hill in a couple weeks so grandpa and myself got to work pulling the tranny out and had it rebuilt by a friend.

    We stayed up til 2am once again to get it ready for the ride, it was miserable. But we made it!
    First ride [Video]
    Since that ride I've been bringing the Jeep back to life. It's been to Bundy Hill numerous times, and we even brought it to Haspin [Video]. Off the top of my head it's had: new carb, head gasket, 12V conversion, u-joints, winch... I found a huge lot of parts to begin my MB conversion. Non-dry rotted military tires, MB fenders/windshield/hood, reproduction seats, rear leafs, jerry cans, and I also sourced out a GPW grille.

    Whenever I had free time I've been working on it the past 8 months. Usually it's a little here and there.

    Now I've begun the big step into the restoration. I'm dying to get this road legal and looking halfway decent. Mechanically I need to change the intermediate shaft in the tcase, rear pinion seal, install the Warn overdrive, and have front disk brakes on the way. Drums suck in the mud. These will be the next step soon after I get my rear leafs put on. The stock U-style shackles are sketchy for off-road use so we're going to a custom made CJ5 type shackle. It's hard to tell in the pictures, but the entire body is trashed from 60+ years of beatings. The previous owner welded in a new floorboard which is great, but the outer tub is banana shaped bondo with crumpled/rusted metal behind it. So, I had the acquired parts sandblasted and began the gruesome body work and painting process.

    Next up was painting the chassis. I used a sanding wheel and went at the most visible parts of the frame: bumper and side-rails. With the pitted look gone it transformed. Then I hit the hubs that would be visible with the rims on.

    That was the easy part. Dad taught me how to weld and I started making my own patch panels for the fenders and hood. After sandblast they came back pretty nasty. It was pretty difficult welding the panels in, even with the heat turned down I was blasting holes through the thinned metal. It's not the best work in the world, but it'll do just fine. Next I'll fill in the patches with bondo and smooth it out nicely. I've also been undenting the grille.

    The whole section from the windshield forward will be the parts I've completely restored. For the tub, we know a guy who's going to wrap the outside in sheet metal and make it look appealing. His YJ looked like it drove off the showroom floor. Before then I'd like to have the mechanics all but finished so I can finish painting and swap my parts over, then register. Before I leave for college I'll send the engine to Keith, no more mosquito smoking feature I'll keep the thread updated as progress goes.

    This old Jeep has taught me an immense amount of mechanical and repair knowledge. When it's done it'll be my proudest achievement

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Texas
    Posts
    2,161
    Many years back, I bought the military version of the same Jeep, an M38A1 same vintage 1952. Between all the break-downs, jerry rigging, and conversion to 12v, that thing really helped the mechanical and welding skills.

    The irony is, I sold the Jeep to get money to buy a real 6x6, it was an early model Max2.

    Looking forward to your thread.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    TUCSON
    Posts
    777
    WOW, the willys are so fun i have a 50 that i trail ride in. i bought a dana 30 for up front and converted to disc, disc kit i got from herm the over drive guy. very well built kit.
    the rear dana 44 was out of a 72 and a 1/2 cj 5 so i could still have the offset axle but a buildable axle. locker and 1 piece axles,
    HAVE FUN BUILDING IT , I DID

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Pittsburgh PA
    Posts
    1,153
    Very nice to see a project like that. Doing the work yourself teaches you a bunch of great skills and also gives you some mechanical confidence.
    Looking forward to see the finished product!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Buffalo, NY area
    Posts
    2,968
    Cool project Nick.... I was heavily steeped in the Jeep stuff before the ATV bug took a strong hold.


    I had an '88 XJ that was a daily driver back and forth between school. It went through a couple upgrades an evolutionary steps (backwards, some say) until I finally decided to shoehorn in a late 70s J20 driveline. It ended up with a 360, dana 44 front, full floater dana 50 rear, twin sticked NP205 transfer case and Borg Warner T-18. I made a 3/4 elliptical front suspension for it and it eventually had about 10-12" lift to clear 36s. I never got around to shortening the diffs before I sold it, so it was a bit ugly going down the road. She'd really flex though. I made my own drag link for the steering that was at about a 30 degree angle from the pitman arm. When you'd be going down the road and you hit a bump, you'd learn to just let go of the wheel, and she'd track straight. If you tried to wrangle the ornery beast, it'd throw you in a ditch. Probably a lot like coming down from 45mph with a Baker Hill, I suppose.






  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Location
    Caldwell, Idaho
    Posts
    1,174
    Thats great Nick , as you probably know I love 4x4s of all kinds older the better.

    Have fun and keep the updates coming

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Location
    louisville ky
    Posts
    278
    looking good Nick, seemed to run ok at Haspin hope you get it done before you leave for school

  8. #8
    Great work Nick. I had a '43 Military jeep and my neighbor had a '4? ford Military Jeep. We had fun restoring them. Sold mine to a guy that wanted it much worse than I...and he paid dearly for it. I also had a '70's Jago Jeep (British Co. made it out of fiberglass and plywood, most plywood) with a Ford Cortina four banger in it when I was stationed in England back in the 80's. It was a real screamer. We drove it from S/E England to as far north in Scotland as land would go. What a rush! and totally scenic. It wouldn't qualify for stateside shipping, so I sold it over there. Bummed me out!
    Last edited by Outlaw1; 01-29-2015 at 04:21 PM.
    Our motto in the Strategic Air Command was "Peace is our Profession". If you don't believe it we'll bomb the hell out of you.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Location
    Waldo Wi
    Posts
    941
    A fella learns a lot doin' projects like that, Will pay off big down the road as far as applying this lesson to everything else ya run across in life.


    Nice to see the Good work

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Mar 2013
    Location
    San Francisco Bay Area
    Posts
    328
    Great project. I used to have a Willys pickup that I did a lot of the same stuff you're doing to. When I got mine it had a Studebaker 289 V8 in it, and the gears had gone out the side of the transfer case. I put a Chevy 250 straight 6 in it, rebuilt the transmission/transfer, replaced brakes, put in a PTO powered winch, and repaired the interior. I wound up giving it to some people who were returning home to Guatemala after the civil war. They needed something that would let them drive all the way there and then be a work truck on the farm after that. Its been 20+ years since I've last seen it but in my mind its still working for them.

+ Reply to Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts