Features Research Archives

To Top

More Progress From Paul

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

Paul’s added more panels to his M-38. The gray panels look real nice inside. Somehow, he managed to arrange an earthquake in Alaska just to test the design!

paul-upholstery-m38-6

I purchased more shower curtain rods so I could speed up my progress on installing the Willys interior panels. I’m excited seeing the improvement the fabric panels make over the bare stainless and it seems Mother Nature is excited also. Yesterday (Sept. 25th) we had a 6.2 earthquake rumble thru town and this evening we had another smaller earthquake measuring only 5.0. The 6.2 quake managed to knock some stuff off the shelves in the garage and some items stored in the crawlspace were broken but we had no damage to the house or the Willys so I’m a happy guy. Here’s a picture of two more interior panels being held in place by 10 curtain rods (upholstery tensioning devices) and you can see the gray fabric panel slightly above the center of this photo. Tomorrow I’ll install two more overhead panels and prep the two vertical corner pieces if the earth quits moving long enough for me to reposition the tension rods.

paul-upholstery-m38-5

As you might have noticed, I clamped the rear window upholstery panel into position this morning. The interior panel is protected by a 2 inch thick white foam overlay and cardboard taped to the stainless protects the surface from scratches from the vise grip clamps. paul-upholstery-m38-4

Two inch thick foam overlay protects the upholstery panel and spreads the clamping force. Two smaller finished pieces are installed and clamped by the famous adjustable tension rods. I’ve used 34 tubes (12.9 ounces each) of black silicone to attach 15 interior panels and I still have 18 panels left to install.

paul-upholstery-m38-2

I never expected shower curtain rods and foam insulation were necessary tools for installing upholstery in the Willys. As you can see on the right Vise Grips, thin plywood and pink foam are also needed. Yes, we embrace diversity here in the northland. paul-upholstery-m38-1

 

[fb_button]
 
To Top

Third Annual Swap Meet Saturday October 4th

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

UPDATE: Don’t forget about the 3rd Annual Swap Meet in Siler City, NC, this weekend.

East Coast Willys Restorations is is hosting the East Coast Willys Association’s 3rd Annual Swap Meet on Saturday, October 4th, in Siler City, North Carolina. I’ve donated a few items to help benefit the NC Vietnam Veterans group.

3rd-annual-swap-meet

[fb_button]
 
To Top

San Juan Colorado License Plate on ebay

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

This has some damage. I don’t know how rare (or not) these are.

“Here’s a Very Interesting and Vintage “Colorado San Juan, Colo. Mtns. JEEP CAPITOL OF THE WORLD” License Plate. It’s made of tin, measures 4 1/2 ” x 12,” and does show some age/use/wear. That’s why we took FIVE Pictures.”

View all the information on eBay

sanjuan-mtns-license-plate

[fb_button]
 
To Top

1944 Wheaties Cartoon Page on eBay

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

Here’s another Wheaties ad on eBay. Has a little bit of a Ford GP look to it.

“This old comic book ad (which ran in publications as a promotion, and measures approximately 6×9 inches) has a little wear, but is still in pretty good shape!  Not a photocopy or more recent reproduction.”

View all the information on ebay

1944-wheaties-get-going-ad-cartoon

[fb_button]
 
To Top

Early CJ-2A Mailer on eBay

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

At $15.95, this is a good price on the early mailer.

“Here is an Original 1945 1946 Jeep CJ-2A Mailer Type Brochure. Size is 10.75″ x 14″ folded and opens to a nice large 21.5″ x 14″ to show the views in the listing. Condition is N.O.S. (new old stock). This may have been the first sales literature for the new postwar Jeep. Printed on Newsprint they show some aging as the pictures show.”

View all the information on eBay

early-cj2a-brochure1

early-cj2a-brochure2

[fb_button]
 
To Top

1951 Photo of General Walker’s Wrecked Jeep on eBay

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

UPDATE: I’ve added some more pics of what might have been General Walker’s jeep. It shows some of the modifications made to it.

general-walkers-jeep-korea2

http://www.bevinalexander.com/korea/korean-war-photos.htm Brigadier General F.W. Farrell, Korean Military Advisory Group chief, confers on August 18, 1950, with Lieutenant General Walton H. Walker (seated in jeep), Eighth Army commander, during the height of the Pusan Perimeter battle. (U.S. Army photo.)

This video shows McArthur decorating Walker. Note Walker’s padded jeep seat.

This photo shows what I think is McArthur’s jeep (?). It isn’t quite the same as Walker’s jeep, but does have the same handle positioned over the cowl.

general-walkers-jeep-korea

===================

General Walton Walker, aka “Johnny Walker”, was killed as a part of this jeep wreck. What’s curious to me is the mod to the area under the rear of the jeep (gas tank??) and the modified steps (don’t normally see that). You can learn a great deal about General Walker here:

http://www.oocities.org/generalwaltonwalker/11walkerbio.html

View all of the sellers items on eBay

1941-01-21-ted-walker-killed1

1941-01-21-ted-walker-killed2

[fb_button]
 
To Top

1943 Photo of Soldier on Bike with One Tire on eBay

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

It might have only one tire, but I suspect that soldier wouldn’t trade it for the jeep … well, maybe he would. The jeep’s a slat grille MB.

“1943- While his buddies ride in jeep, U.S. soldier uses bicycle, which only has one tire, and it’s flat, to get around on newly captured Makin Island.”

View all of the sellers items on eBay

1943-12-03-bike-one-tire1

1943-12-03-bike-one-tire2

[fb_button]
 
To Top

Driving Panama’s Darien Gap in 1960

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

Given the Darien Gap video above, it seemed appropriate that I (finally) share parts of a March 1961 (pg 366-389) article about a group of seven adventurers who pulled, pushed, towed and cajoled a Willys Truck and a Land-Rover through the rough Panamanian country-side, officially becoming the first vehicles to ever make the Darien Gap trip. The article and photographs were both by Kip Ross.

Wikipedia notes, “The first vehicular crossing of the Gap was by the Land Rover La Cucaracha Cariñosa (The Affectionate Cockroach) and a Jeep of the Trans-Darién Expedition of 1959–60, crewed by Amado Araúz (Panama), his wife Reina Torres de Araúz, former Special Air Service man Richard E. Bevir (UK), and engineer Terence John Whitfield (Australia). They left Chepo, Panama, on 2 February 1960 and reached Quibdó, Colombia, on 17 June 1960, averaging 201 m (220 yd) per hour over 136 days. They traveled a great deal of the distance up the vast Atrato River.” For some reason, Wikipedia doesn’t include the three other members, Otis Imboden, Ilse Abshagen, and, of course, Kip Ross.

You can learn more about the different groups that crossed the Darien Gap at Wikipedia:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darién_Gap

In addition, “The first all-land auto crossing was in 1985–87 by Loren Upton and Patty Mercier in a CJ-5 Jeep, taking 741 days to travel 125 miles (201 km). This crossing is documented in the 1992 Guinness Book of Records.”

View March 1961 National Geographic Magazines on eBay

1961-national-geographic-darien-gap-kip-ross1 1961-national-geographic-darien-gap-kip-ross2 1961-national-geographic-darien-gap-kip-ross3 1961-national-geographic-darien-gap-kip-ross4 1961-national-geographic-darien-gap-kip-ross5

[fb_button]