There seems to be value here.
“Willy’s 1951 Jeep
Needs work”
There seems to be value here.
“Willy’s 1951 Jeep
Needs work”
This is another CJ-5/CJ-3A combined body.
“1949 Willy Jeep CJ3A body mounted on a 1955 CJ5 frame. It has a 225-V6 with a 3spd Transmission. The front axle is a Dana 27 and the rear axle is a Dana 44. The frame is perfect and the body is good. This is a project vehicle and currently does not run or drive. It’s been in dry storage since 1980. All of the major parts are there to complete. If your looking for a Jeep project this is a great opportunity. ”
No pics provided.
“1948 willy’s jeep cj2a. Ran good when i bought it. Started to redo. No longer interested. Body was bad besides hood tailgate and front end. Raidator tested core bad. 4 cyl flat head 2 seats. Bikini top. As far as i know everything original. I still have all parts i took apart minus the shell. 3 speed high low I think.”
UPDATE: Price dropped to $2800.
Has some updates.
“Selling my 1946 Jeep Willys CJ2A
265 Chevy Small Block
Engine # 3720991
Casting # 3725306
D-106”
Normal postings will appear Monday morning.
Franziska Gygax shared pics of this jeep on Facebook. He wrote, “Was made by Kaspar Gut a swiss carosserie maker. In the back is place for 4 swiss milk cans. And on the weekend you rebuilt the back to 1 seat for 2 people“
Lots of jeep action. They drive the jeeps pretty hear near the end. At about the 8:30 mark there some hard driving video. The jeeps were bouncing pretty hard!
From archive.org: “Not the greatest film quality. National Archives description: “A 4.2″ mortar fires high explosive and phosphorus shells which explode on targets. Transportation of mortar and ammunition in large truck (10 men-10 rounds) is compared with that of a jeep towing a trailer bearing a mortar and ammunition (2 jeeps-6 men-48 rounds). Jeep and trailer units are tested at various speeds and on all types of terrain, fire mortars from barge landing craft as an island is approached, drive off barge, and are freed from ditches and other obstacles by their crews.”
National Archives Identifier: 24456”
This 1955 July Willys News article highlights the naming of a Navajo baby named Jeep Chee. My attempts to learn more about Jeep Chee weren’t very successful. I did find this odd movie script. There is a more extensive article about Gwen and Marvin Walter in the July 1958 issue of Desert Magazine.
UPDATE: This jeep kicked off a parade in Sante Fe, Kansas, this weekend.
(03/02/2015) Tom Pestinger restored this former KSAL radio station jeep. The station owned the jeep for decades, but it had deteriorated by the time Tom purchased it. The restoration took several years, but it looks to have been worth it. You can read the whole story at the KSAL website.
UPDATE: **SOLD** Was no Price. I’ll keep the post around in case I see another CJ-6 body for sale.
A guy on Facebook has a couple CJ-6 fiberglass bodies for sale. No pics provided.