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Bends, Cracks, and Mud

• CATEGORIES: Builds, Features • TAGS: This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

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There’s nothing like disassembly to reveal all the problems that remained unseen. Once the body came off, the realities revealed themselves.

The front cross member is cracked on the driver’s side (no surprise there — funny how I didn’t notice it with the body on it). The transmission is so packed with muck that I doubt any oil could leak through it. There are also some odd bends, like the mid cross member, which had something hit it with enough force to bend one side. Maybe the driveline broke at some point and flew up into it? Of course, there were rusty bolts, too, some which not even PB Blaster could save. At least it is getting closer to being disassembled.

The first big event was the removal of the body. I used a block and tackle to pull the body off:
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1945 Photo of Experimental Farm Jeep

• CATEGORIES: Features, Magazine • TAGS: This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

This photo and caption were published in the February 1945 issue of Popular Mechanics.

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1945 Photo of Jeep on Guam on eBay

• CATEGORIES: Features, Old Images This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

Looks like a photo op.

“1945 PRESS PHOTO Road Signs From Oil Drums Guam Jeep 4473 Measures 6.25 X 8.25 inches”

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Working Away

• CATEGORIES: Builds, Features • TAGS: This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

With the rain staying away for a few days, I booked it over to Renton for a few days to work on Rusty. Here are a few of the things I did today.

I did a little more straightening to the body. This time I wanted to remove a bow along the top back. I’ve mounted a board as a straight edge. You can see the cancer in the rear.

2017-04-09-rusty-body-work2You can see there’s a gap between the board and the back.

2017-04-09-rusty-body-work1After some clamps and some sweet talking with a 5lb sledge, I coaxed the back into line.
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Then I played doctor and removed the cancer.2017-04-09-rusty-body-work4

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Auto Week article on the Davy Crockett and M-38A1

• CATEGORIES: Features, M-38A1 This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

Craig shared this article about the M-38A1D.

http://autoweek.com/article/wait-theres-more/time-army-jeep-was-nuclear-launch-vehicle

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Photo Credit: Auto Week Via the US Army

 
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Year? Photo of Jeep Driving onto a Float on eBay

• CATEGORIES: Features, Old Images This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

It’s dated Nov 29, 1940, which is highly unlikely given this version of the jeep hadn’t been built yet. I’d guess more like late Nov 29, 1942 is more likely.

“1940 Press Photo US Military Men Directing Jeep on a Float. This is an original press photo. US Military men directing jeep on a float.Photo measures 10 x 8.25inches. Photo is dated 11-29-1940.”

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1941 Photo of Bantam BRC 40 in Tennessee on eBay

• CATEGORIES: Bantam-FordGP-WillysMA-EarlyJPs, Features, Old Images This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

This is already at $70!

1941- U.S. soldier driving a Bantam BRC-40 jeep through a creek during maneuvers in Tennessee. Photo measures approx. 7″ x 9″.

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1945 Photo & Caption of Armored Jeep in Pop Mech

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This photo and caption shows an armored jeep in the March 1945 issue of Popular Mechanics.

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Fine Art Jeep Model on eBay

• CATEGORIES: Features, Models This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

Harry Neilson’s brother James is selling his “Fine Art Model” 1/8 Willys on eBay. According to Harry, there were only 250 of these models made by this commpany and the model is regarded as the finest, most proportionately correct scale Willys. Here are more about the fine art jeeps here: http://www.fineartmodels.com/Jeep.html

View all the information on eBay

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This sale is for a 1:8 scale Fine Art Models Willys MB Jeep produced in 1992. This model is number 60 of 250 ever produced. Numbers started at 20200900 as the hood marking and went up to 20201150. The model measures approximately 18″ long.

FAM’s model of the Willys Jeep is considered the most sought after miniature amongst Jeep enthusiasts for its attention to detail, proportions and gauges, and material usage in every respect.
Every part on these jeeps (as is the case with many of their other models) is manufactured by studying and measuring a dissasembled wartime vehicle. Parts are either soldered together or bolted; no glue is used. The sheet metal components on this vehicle are in formed brass, castings are bronze or white metal, the windshield, headlamps, parking lamps and instrument lenses are glass, shift boots and door straps are canvas, weather stripping is rubber or felt, and correct pattern Goodyear tires are made using their own molds in rubber. Continue reading

 
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The Cam Tool Company’s Clary Flanges

• CATEGORIES: Features • TAGS: This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

clary-flange-hub2Born in 1893, Louie H. Ponnequin, a veteran of WWI, was fifty-five years old when he filed a patent in January 1948 for what appears to be the Clary Hubs. At the time, he was living in Hawaii, so it’s possible that being around the military bases there he saw a need for a simple free-spinning jeep hub. Though Arthur Warn invented his standard spinning hub cap a year earlier in 1947, there’s no evidence that Warn ever patented his “summer hub”.

The Clary Flange (a couple of these pics are seen in this thread, but I don’t know the original source):

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