This is so awesome! I have a 43 gpw. Ford f stamped everywhere. Of course it is a hodge podge jeep cause I wanted reliability rather than stock...the story is great too. My dad paid $75 for it in the mid 1960's to travel to a cabin we had. Kept it in the family by giving it to me at 14 years old in the 80's. Still running and in my garage today. Staying in the family 😊
In the 80's, I bought to flip, a 1972 DJ, it had a Chevy 4 cylinder, a powerglide, and a Dana 60 5.14 rear, top speed 45mph. It was painted metallic green w orange shag carpet and yellow curtains in the back of the hardtop. In the 90's, I bought a '63 jeep w a 225 V6. The moment I got it home, I had to get rid of the 1bbl carb, I carved an adapter and got a Pinto progressive 2bbl on there. It really scooted, my phone rang, I answered it and my "buddy" took off in the jeep. I got off the phone and I looked around, I heard revving behind the house. I ran back there, he had run straight into the swamp, got half way in and got stuck, it was really sloppy mud. he forward, reversed, forward, reversed, and ZING, no more rear tires spinning. A spider gear came out thru the center of the back cover. I never got to drive it. I towed it out w a tractor and I sold it.
Aloha Fred, we see a few DJ's here in Hawai'i. Resorts on Kauai had a few "resort jeeps", made by Kaiser-Willys. Many were sold locally and converted to 4x4. One desirable feature of these DJ's is a rear fill gas tank. The 10 gl tank fits nicely under the bed between the frame rails. Cool!
Might be a Flatty person soon - I have a lead on a barn find so I wanted to know what it is when I finally see it. Thanks for the lesson! I started out driving a 1953 Willys Jeep station wagon in 1966. Ah, the memories! That was replaced with a 1950 Jeepster. Then I spent a year driving an M151 in Vietnam.
Hi Fred, your green windshield is military, either MB or GPW. A CJ2A would be stamped with Willys. And a Slatgrill windshield would be shorter. Hope this helps !
I had a 1947 CJ2A that had the rounded windshield. It was lifted 5 1/2", SBC powered with a Muncie M20 and Warn Overdrive. It's one of the few vehicles that I regret getting rid of. Maybe one day I'll get another one.
Man I had one of those overdrives for the longest time just sitting for future use. It needed a rebuild but I got it for free out of a parts rig. After talking with Herm a few times I decided to give it to a friend with a early military jeep. I regret getting rid of it, as well as every vehicle I've ever sold. I've come to the conclusion 'never sell anything'.
I love the original flats but you left out a Willys model that i would choose over the small flat fenders, the Willys wagon with the flathead Super Hurricane 6. My dad had a '64 and we spent many weekends exploring Utahs west desert in that rig.
06:55 - Ford's GP did _not_ designate 'General Purpose'. That is an oft repeated myth. GP was Ford internal code for _Government, 80" wheelbase_ as 'P' was their design code for any vehicle with 80" w/b. After initial prototypes of Bantam, Willys, and Ford vehicles had been tested, Ordnance issued small (10,000 - ish unit) contracts to each of the three manufacturers which resulted in the 'pre standard' models of" Bantam BRC (Bantam Reconnaissance Car) Willys MA (Military, 1st contract) Ford GP (Government. 80" w/b) After the contract to produce 'Truck, 1/4 Ton, 4X4, G503' was awarded to Willys Overland, they would go on to produce over 360,000 of their Model MB (Military, 2nd contract) as Ford would produce, under contract, over 280,000 of their Model GPW (Government, 80", Willys pattern). 08:25 - The (nine slot) stamped steel grille with headlights mounted behind on hinges was a Ford innovation, introduced early in production of the GPW model and soon thereafter adopted by Willys for the MB. Prior vehicles (early MB / GPW, MA, GP, BRC) had welded iron 'slat grilles' as found on larger military trucks. 'Military production' Willys MC (M38) vehicles of the Korean War period had seven slot grilles as did the subsequent M38A1 models. 10:33 - Tool boxes shown are Ford GPW as evidenced by contoured lid. Willys MB had flat lids. 10:43 - M38 (Willys MC) 'Jeeps' of the Korean War era had pioneer tool indents on the 'passenger side'. 12:09 _All_ of the 'flatfender Jeeps' (as well as _all_ M38A1 and pre 1966 CJs) had the 134 cubic inch engine, not 'most'. The cylinder head was changed to a semi overhead valve design (F Head) used in the M38A1, CJ3B, and CJ5 models as the previous (L Head) version was continued for CJ3A and DJ models. _Edit - you do get to that later._ 16:09 - There were a very small number of CJ2 models produced, tested, and marketed as 'Agri-Jeep'. A few still exist. 18:40 - The underseat fuel tank is a holdover from original military design. If the driver gets hit the vehicle is toast, anyhow, so consolidate the risk. 19:04 - Yes, the 2A windshield frame is taller than the MB/GPW, which is taller than the early ('slat grille') and pre production models. Yours appears to be from an MB or GPW. It looks 'short' for a 2A and lacks the Willys stamping. 23:34 - Also, CJ3A had frame rails that extend to front bumper. The 2A and previous had gussets between bumper and frame. This area, however, has often been cut away / modified over years of use. 24:12 - M38 had 24 volt _waterproof_ electrical systems. The grille is hinged to fold downward for access to radiator. 27:56 - An engine that fits early Jeeps well is Buick's V6. Kaiser purchased rights and tooling for it in its 'Odd Fire' form in 1966 and branded it 'Dauntless'. 31:07 - I've always thought of the 3B as Mr. Ranger's Jeep from Yogi Bear cartoons. 31:25 - M606 was for export to nations 'friendly' to the U.S.. 34:20 - CJ3B was sold in the U.S. through 1968. It saw production for years afterward worldwide through licensing arrangements Willys and Kaiser had made with firms in Japan, Brazil, the Philippines, India, and more. 36:48 - That 'tub' is in good shape! Generally, even 'out West', opening the underseat toolbox reveals the ground below. Bed looks good, too, from what little is visible in vid. Your Custom Summer Camp Jeep is gorgeous.
I loved this history lesson. I had a family member who had an old military Jeep years ago with the sealed spark plugs and special breather. He said he had driven it through a river with water up in his lap.
American Bantam had been soliciting the U.S. Army for years regarding their need for a light recon vehicle. When the bid request was issued in June of 1940 by Ordnance, Bantam was first to respond, supplied the only prototype that was delivered on time, was closest to specifications. When the contract to produce 'Truck, 1/4 Ton, 4X4, G503' was awarded to Willys Overland with Ford as subcontractor, Bantam received contracts to build 1/4 ton trailers (their model T-3) alongside the Willys built MB-T.
Ol’ Blue will always be my fav flatty. When I saw the episode with Fred, Pete, and Dave I was trying to weigh the amount of guff I would get from family if I got a jeep….. I went and bought one after watching the episode and my wife and kids now love off roading.
Nice history lesson. Have always been into the CJs and have a Scrambler. Got a hold of a ‘49 CJ3a 6 years ago and have been driving it a ton and learning as much as I can. Thanks for the video.
Great history lesson. In the next episode, you can pick up where you left off. You almost got to the most important change in Willys/Jeep evolution. M38A1/CJ5. Great job it was informative and not boring.
My dad had a cj5 . He bought it from a guy that had rolled is into a river. We cleaned up the tub changed the oil and fluid in the trans and axles. He drove that jeep for years until he got a 51 Willy’s pickup. This was 1981 .he now is working on a 1953 Willy’s overland wagon .
Lol Fred, I think the 3B 'issue' is mostly in your head (I've heard you slander them before). More room for engine (etc), better ergonomics, beaffier frame etc. Proportioned right, they look BETTER than the others. High hood= High class. I agree with your take on Willys pronunciation. Great vids.
Awesome video and history lesson! I went to the Bantem Jeep heritage festival in Butler, Pa. There was a guy there giving a lesson about the early Jeeps named Paul Bruno. He said the reason the military ended up going with Willy’s rather than Ford was because one of the politicians back then didn’t like Henry Ford. I thought that was funny, things could be different if they went with Ford. Paul Bruno also wrote “ the original jeeps” book. It’s very interesting, if you are into books.
I think the very first few viewers don't have ads maybe? or maybe it was still processing. but fee free to watch it 10k more times and tell all your friends and family to watch it. thanks for the support!
Alan Jackson (The Country Singer) had one of those Resort DJs in pink. Sold it at a charity auction a few years back, but he used it in the music video for his song Drive. I am glad you included the info about Bantam getting the shaft in the "Jeep" race. That is often over looked in the history of Jeeps. The Garden Jeep is my favorite. Many for its DED Rubicon trip.
He may have owned a Surry but the vehicle in his Drive video was a Bronco. I remember when the video came out wondering why he didn’t use a Jeep when thats what he was singing about
Great video, I learned some stuff. Looking forward to your CJ-5 video. I have a 61 project. It says jeep , but has Kaiser & willys I believe on the vin tag drivers side. Has also the snorkel slot on hood and I’m guessing the battery box in front of windshield and hood passenger side. Another cool feature is the passenger manual windshield wiper lol. I’ve done nothing to jeep other than drag into yard with my other yard ornaments,like my international travelall ,flat fender civilian 52 dodge power wagon ,1983 jeep wagoner,Suzuki samari ,69 Chevy truck , Nissan xterra,1977 jeep truck rolling chassis. 1/2 dozen moto four Yamahas and big bears. Which one should I start on is my next life decision lol
In 1971 my Late Dad bought a 1943 Willys from J.M. Wildman Buick which if I remember right was just down the road from where you live. My Great Uncle and Aunt lived in Paso Robles, CA. And my Great Uncle told Dad about it and he bought it and dragged it down to San Pedro ,CA. to where he worked and we spent many a weekend working on it. Sadly now all of them are gone and the Jeep left before I got my driver's lic. which might have been a good thing.
You told the Willys version of the story. Off road combat cars started in 1916 during Pershing's Mexican expedition against Poncho Villa. The army used Dodge touring cars, and Patton used them as scout vehicles and in fast attack. The U.S. army was near the first, and most allied powers that could produce them used vehicles in WW 1 in Europe. The cars had their limitations, but would haul more stuff more quickly than horses and mules. When he got to Europe in WW 1, Patton (still under Pershing) and his driver were seriously wounded while scouting the military frontier in an automobile. A lot of the war department engineering requirements for the WW 2 jeep were based on specs of those early 1910-1920s Dodge, Ford, and REO cars.
Just finally digging into a flatfender, and I’m stoked about it! Great little video. Enjoyed it. Now, bring that sticker up to the great white north, and we will show you some sights!!
Could we get a good break down of the Red Gpw in the back especially on the front frame stretch portion and yes I watched the dirt everyday extra and rk extras as well You do an awesome job!
Toss up- my '42 GPW was kind of my favorite but when it came down to having to either sell it or my '46 CJ2A I've owned since 1974, I just couldn't let go of my first Jeep. If I had it to do over again, I'd swap the GPW grille and headlights, steering wheel, clutch and brake pedals and the brass windshield hold down latches onto the '2A before I let the GPW go...
Own a '48 2A, stock powertrain + PTO driven winch. Very fun, very slow, and brakes are only a suggestion. My '49 3A has an oddfire 225 V6 and upgraded 9" drum brakes from a Dana 27 on the front, a 1" block lift welded between the frame and spring perches, 31" tires on 15"x5" Samauri 'wagon wheels'. It'll do 60 mph @ 3600 RPM with the stock T90 3spd and 5.38s spinning in the Dana 25 front and Dana 41 rear axles, but you'd better hold onto it! It'll be one of the last things I'd sell. Truely gets only Smiles Per Gallon.
My dad drove a dj jeep when he worked at the post-office. I loved riding in the jeep when he took me to work with him. It only had one seat and i had to sit on the mail bags. You cant do that anymore.
Fred.. my 51 Dodge M37 is so much like a M38 but on steroids.. there must be shared ideas after WWII between companies.. also the first Toyota 4x4 is or must be an inspiration of the jeep too.
I would rather watch videos like these over 90% of the garbage thats out there. Good info! Thanks Fred, been following since your magazine days. Not as old as these but I have a 69 Jeepster Commando project I haven't started yet. I have a YJ with a lot of mods done to it already and have considered putting the Commando body on the YJ. Yes it'll have to be stretched a hair but the YJ already has 6 inches of stretch built in so I'm hoping it wont be too bad.
have a 73 cj5, frame beautied up with a 74 360. The original 304 is in the garage on a stand, Some bright person over carb it and should be out for a good refresh
Fred build a conundrum M38,Mb,Gpw,Cj2a. Shovel hatchet slots both sides, removable gage plate, glove box, and tailgate. Excellent information but what about the cj6?
I had a 53 CJ3B that was all original and running when I was in high school 1993-94. But being a stupid teenager I sold it. Found it in an old farmer's barn. He used it to plow his field.
I have always wanted a ford jeep. Maybe some day. Funny story, my dad was in the army and just before the Korean war and was assigned to be a driver on post, He agreed and asked if he could pick out his own jeep. They said okay. He got the only one that had a heater in it. One day he had to give a Major a ride, The Major notice the heater and the next day that jeep was gone. lol..
You forgot to mention the Hotchkiss M201 Prob the best flat fender made as a Willys MB made under license in France by Hotchkiss with 27,000 odd Government contract production runs, identical to Willys MB of WW2 but stronger chassis, suspension, 24 volt electrics, L134 gear drive cam with Solex carb, popular here in UK and seem to also be in Australia, don’t think many are in USA? There were also 6 known Civilian C201s made in 69/70 before Hotchkiss factory closed in France, i own the 5th one made - the 5th last factory Willys MB, only found this out a few months ago 😁👍 Cheers Bruce
The next car I buy will hopefully be a Flatty. I think a CJ3B with a Kubota V2203 would be perfect. If the cost wasn't so high a Mitsubishi built 3B would be primo
So I guess I have a 45-49 CJ2a - thanks for that. Just wish someone had not taken all the tags off of it to verify and eventually push through the DMV. Maybe the locked up I-134 will give me a clue.
This is so awesome! I have a 43 gpw. Ford f stamped everywhere. Of course it is a hodge podge jeep cause I wanted reliability rather than stock...the story is great too. My dad paid $75 for it in the mid 1960's to travel to a cabin we had. Kept it in the family by giving it to me at 14 years old in the 80's. Still running and in my garage today. Staying in the family 😊
I always loved substitute teacher days! It doesn't get any better than a flat fender lesson, thanks?
In the 80's, I bought to flip, a 1972 DJ, it had a Chevy 4 cylinder, a powerglide, and a Dana 60 5.14 rear, top speed 45mph. It was painted metallic green w orange shag carpet and yellow curtains in the back of the hardtop. In the 90's, I bought a '63 jeep w a 225 V6. The moment I got it home, I had to get rid of the 1bbl carb, I carved an adapter and got a Pinto progressive 2bbl on there. It really scooted, my phone rang, I answered it and my "buddy" took off in the jeep. I got off the phone and I looked around, I heard revving behind the house. I ran back there, he had run straight into the swamp, got half way in and got stuck, it was really sloppy mud. he forward, reversed, forward, reversed, and ZING, no more rear tires spinning. A spider gear came out thru the center of the back cover. I never got to drive it. I towed it out w a tractor and I sold it.
How old were you?
@@xmo552 I was about 20 when I got the DJ.
It’s cool to see you guys here. Long time Petersen’s reader. It was the real off-roader’s mag cause of you and the crew👍👍
Fred, you have earned your new title: Professor Williams. Thanks for the interesting content!👍
Aloha Fred, we see a few DJ's here in Hawai'i. Resorts on Kauai had a few "resort jeeps", made by Kaiser-Willys. Many were sold locally and converted to 4x4. One desirable feature of these DJ's is a rear fill gas tank. The 10 gl tank fits nicely under the bed between the frame rails. Cool!
Might be a Flatty person soon - I have a lead on a barn find so I wanted to know what it is when I finally see it. Thanks for the lesson!
I started out driving a 1953 Willys Jeep station wagon in 1966. Ah, the memories! That was replaced with a 1950 Jeepster. Then I spent a year driving an M151 in Vietnam.
Hi Fred, your green windshield is military, either MB or GPW.
A CJ2A would be stamped with Willys. And a Slatgrill windshield would be shorter.
Hope this helps !
Great presentation Fred, glad to have found you and Dave here in the TH-cams.
I had a 1947 CJ2A that had the rounded windshield. It was lifted 5 1/2", SBC powered with a Muncie M20 and Warn Overdrive. It's one of the few vehicles that I regret getting rid of. Maybe one day I'll get another one.
Man I had one of those overdrives for the longest time just sitting for future use. It needed a rebuild but I got it for free out of a parts rig.
After talking with Herm a few times I decided to give it to a friend with a early military jeep. I regret getting rid of it, as well as every vehicle I've ever sold. I've come to the conclusion 'never sell anything'.
I was only watching this video to see if you'd mention a DJ-3A. Good work, sir.
I love the original flats but you left out a Willys model that i would choose over the small flat fenders, the Willys wagon with the flathead Super Hurricane 6.
My dad had a '64 and we spent many weekends exploring Utahs west desert in that rig.
06:55 - Ford's GP did _not_ designate 'General Purpose'. That is an oft repeated myth.
GP was Ford internal code for _Government, 80" wheelbase_ as 'P' was their design code for any vehicle with 80" w/b.
After initial prototypes of Bantam, Willys, and Ford vehicles had been tested, Ordnance issued small (10,000 - ish unit) contracts to each of the three manufacturers which resulted in the 'pre standard' models of"
Bantam BRC (Bantam Reconnaissance Car)
Willys MA (Military, 1st contract)
Ford GP (Government. 80" w/b)
After the contract to produce 'Truck, 1/4 Ton, 4X4, G503' was awarded to Willys Overland, they would go on to produce over 360,000 of their Model MB (Military, 2nd contract) as Ford would produce, under contract, over 280,000 of their Model GPW (Government, 80", Willys pattern).
08:25 - The (nine slot) stamped steel grille with headlights mounted behind on hinges was a Ford innovation, introduced early in production of the GPW model and soon thereafter adopted by Willys for the MB. Prior vehicles (early MB / GPW, MA, GP, BRC) had welded iron 'slat grilles' as found on larger military trucks. 'Military production' Willys MC (M38) vehicles of the Korean War period had seven slot grilles as did the subsequent M38A1 models.
10:33 - Tool boxes shown are Ford GPW as evidenced by contoured lid. Willys MB had flat lids.
10:43 - M38 (Willys MC) 'Jeeps' of the Korean War era had pioneer tool indents on the 'passenger side'.
12:09 _All_ of the 'flatfender Jeeps' (as well as _all_ M38A1 and pre 1966 CJs) had the 134 cubic inch engine, not 'most'.
The cylinder head was changed to a semi overhead valve design (F Head) used in the M38A1, CJ3B, and CJ5 models as the previous (L Head) version was continued for CJ3A and DJ models. _Edit - you do get to that later._
16:09 - There were a very small number of CJ2 models produced, tested, and marketed as 'Agri-Jeep'. A few still exist.
18:40 - The underseat fuel tank is a holdover from original military design. If the driver gets hit the vehicle is toast, anyhow, so consolidate the risk.
19:04 - Yes, the 2A windshield frame is taller than the MB/GPW, which is taller than the early ('slat grille') and pre production models. Yours appears to be from an MB or GPW. It looks 'short' for a 2A and lacks the Willys stamping.
23:34 - Also, CJ3A had frame rails that extend to front bumper. The 2A and previous had gussets between bumper and frame. This area, however, has often been cut away / modified over years of use.
24:12 - M38 had 24 volt _waterproof_ electrical systems. The grille is hinged to fold downward for access to radiator.
27:56 - An engine that fits early Jeeps well is Buick's V6. Kaiser purchased rights and tooling for it in its 'Odd Fire' form in 1966 and branded it 'Dauntless'.
31:07 - I've always thought of the 3B as Mr. Ranger's Jeep from Yogi Bear cartoons.
31:25 - M606 was for export to nations 'friendly' to the U.S..
34:20 - CJ3B was sold in the U.S. through 1968. It saw production for years afterward worldwide through licensing arrangements Willys and Kaiser had made with firms in Japan, Brazil, the Philippines, India, and more.
36:48 - That 'tub' is in good shape! Generally, even 'out West', opening the underseat toolbox reveals the ground below. Bed looks good, too, from what little is visible in vid.
Your Custom Summer Camp Jeep is gorgeous.
I loved this history lesson. I had a family member who had an old military Jeep years ago with the sealed spark plugs and special breather. He said he had driven it through a river with water up in his lap.
Love the history lesson! Please keep them coming.
I've heard that American Bantam were contracted to make the trailers for the Jeeps, but they also made torpedo motors as well.
American Bantam had been soliciting the U.S. Army for years regarding their need for a light recon vehicle. When the bid request was issued in June of 1940 by Ordnance, Bantam was first to respond, supplied the only prototype that was delivered on time, was closest to specifications.
When the contract to produce 'Truck, 1/4 Ton, 4X4, G503' was awarded to Willys Overland with Ford as subcontractor, Bantam received contracts to build 1/4 ton trailers (their model T-3) alongside the Willys built MB-T.
Ol’ Blue will always be my fav flatty. When I saw the episode with Fred, Pete, and Dave I was trying to weigh the amount of guff I would get from family if I got a jeep….. I went and bought one after watching the episode and my wife and kids now love off roading.
Willys (pronounced /ˈwɪlɪs/, "Willis") 😁 Thanks Fred, great video and very accurate. And "No Name" btw😎
My first Jeep was a '49 3a. Oh man how i wish i still had it! Loved driving that little tractor!
Thanks for the great info. Teacher Fred! I want an MB so bad but the east coast doesn’t have many left 😢
Nice history lesson. Have always been into the CJs and have a Scrambler. Got a hold of a ‘49 CJ3a 6 years ago and have been driving it a ton and learning as much as I can. Thanks for the video.
Yes, more history lessons please Fred. Very interesting and fun for us 4X4 gals and guys. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
I love the flat fender Jeeps. I've had CJ5, CJ7, YJ, TJ, and now a JK. But no flat fenders yet. But one of these days.
Great history lesson. In the next episode, you can pick up where you left off. You almost got to the most important change in Willys/Jeep evolution. M38A1/CJ5. Great job it was informative and not boring.
Yeah I'd be interested in the cj5 stuff.
I enjoyed the history lesson. I hope you can do more in the future. My favorite is the Red GPW.
My dad had a cj5 . He bought it from a guy that had rolled is into a river. We cleaned up the tub changed the oil and fluid in the trans and axles. He drove that jeep for years until he got a 51 Willy’s pickup. This was 1981 .he now is working on a 1953 Willy’s overland wagon .
Lol Fred, I think the 3B 'issue' is mostly in your head (I've heard you slander them before). More room for engine (etc), better ergonomics, beaffier frame etc. Proportioned right, they look BETTER than the others. High hood= High class. I agree with your take on Willys pronunciation. Great vids.
Awesome video and history lesson! I went to the Bantem Jeep heritage festival in Butler, Pa. There was a guy there giving a lesson about the early Jeeps named Paul Bruno. He said the reason the military ended up going with Willy’s rather than Ford was because one of the politicians back then didn’t like Henry Ford. I thought that was funny, things could be different if they went with Ford. Paul Bruno also wrote “ the original jeeps” book. It’s very interesting, if you are into books.
Great history lesson on the flat fenders! I love all of them! Make another video going over the history of the CJ5/6/7/8!
Nice history lesson Mr. Substitute...😅👍✨
Sometimes the substitute knows more than the normal teacher.
Early serial number cj2a's used surplus MB chassis with the 50 cal mounting plate on the frame plus they also came with a 3 on the tree.
No ads? That was disappointing. I don't mind watching ads to support you guys. I have my ad blocker turned off on YT. I like ol' Blue.
I got ads at the beginning and when I rewound.
I think the very first few viewers don't have ads maybe? or maybe it was still processing. but fee free to watch it 10k more times and tell all your friends and family to watch it. thanks for the support!
Alan Jackson (The Country Singer) had one of those Resort DJs in pink. Sold it at a charity auction a few years back, but he used it in the music video for his song Drive.
I am glad you included the info about Bantam getting the shaft in the "Jeep" race. That is often over looked in the history of Jeeps.
The Garden Jeep is my favorite. Many for its DED Rubicon trip.
He may have owned a Surry but the vehicle in his Drive video was a Bronco. I remember when the video came out wondering why he didn’t use a Jeep when thats what he was singing about
Freds always a good watch. Learned something to boot.
I like the 3B. It is the third best looking one.
Great video, I learned some stuff. Looking forward to your CJ-5 video. I have a 61 project. It says jeep , but has Kaiser & willys I believe on the vin tag drivers side. Has also the snorkel slot on hood and I’m guessing the battery box in front of windshield and hood passenger side. Another cool feature is the passenger manual windshield wiper lol. I’ve done nothing to jeep other than drag into yard with my other yard ornaments,like my international travelall ,flat fender civilian 52 dodge power wagon ,1983 jeep wagoner,Suzuki samari ,69 Chevy truck , Nissan xterra,1977 jeep truck rolling chassis. 1/2 dozen moto four Yamahas and big bears. Which one should I start on is my next life decision lol
Great video Fred! Gotta go ol blue. You got me hooked with that episode with Pewe and Freiburger years ago. But also love the garden and the no name.
I think the CJ2A had the Dana 41 rear axle and the 3A got a Dana 44.
In 1971 my Late Dad bought a 1943 Willys from J.M. Wildman Buick which if I remember right was just down the road from where you live. My Great Uncle and Aunt lived in Paso Robles, CA. And my Great Uncle told Dad about it and he bought it and dragged it down to San Pedro ,CA. to where he worked and we spent many a weekend working on it. Sadly now all of them are gone and the Jeep left before I got my driver's lic. which might have been a good thing.
Dude!!! Great video!!! My first jeep was a cj5 hard top Buick v-6!! I couldn't fit in a flat fender!!! Curse my long legs!!!✌️
glad to discover your channel, watched dirt everyday for ever. Sure hope you do a series on the one today.
You told the Willys version of the story. Off road combat cars started in 1916 during Pershing's Mexican expedition against Poncho Villa. The army used Dodge touring cars, and Patton used them as scout vehicles and in fast attack. The U.S. army was near the first, and most allied powers that could produce them used vehicles in WW 1 in Europe. The cars had their limitations, but would haul more stuff more quickly than horses and mules.
When he got to Europe in WW 1, Patton (still under Pershing) and his driver were seriously wounded while scouting the military frontier in an automobile.
A lot of the war department engineering requirements for the WW 2 jeep were based on specs of those early 1910-1920s Dodge, Ford, and REO cars.
Pancho 👍😉
Just finally digging into a flatfender, and I’m stoked about it! Great little video. Enjoyed it. Now, bring that sticker up to the great white north, and we will show you some sights!!
Cool info, my favorite jeep is the CJ8 scrambler.
The CJ3B is on my list to own one day. I really like the look
my husband has a jeep we loved this video! do more please
Great video! It would be great to have you go through the differences between the GPW and the MB. Gotta love that tubular cross member
Could we get a good break down of the Red Gpw in the back especially on the front frame stretch portion and yes I watched the dirt everyday extra and rk extras as well
You do an awesome job!
Awesome love the info. I grew up in a 77 Levi’s cj-5 304 with a 4sp T-18
Toss up- my '42 GPW was kind of my favorite but when it came down to having to either sell it or my '46 CJ2A I've owned since 1974, I just couldn't let go of my first Jeep. If I had it to do over again, I'd swap the GPW grille and headlights, steering wheel, clutch and brake pedals and the brass windshield hold down latches onto the '2A before I let the GPW go...
This was great! I love the recent experimental videos
Loved it Fred and love those old jeeps! I learned lots do more! Landcruiser maybe 🤘👌🇨🇦
Own a '48 2A, stock powertrain + PTO driven winch. Very fun, very slow, and brakes are only a suggestion. My '49 3A has an oddfire 225 V6 and upgraded 9" drum brakes from a Dana 27 on the front, a 1" block lift welded between the frame and spring perches, 31" tires on 15"x5" Samauri 'wagon wheels'. It'll do 60 mph @ 3600 RPM with the stock T90 3spd and 5.38s spinning in the Dana 25 front and Dana 41 rear axles, but you'd better hold onto it! It'll be one of the last things I'd sell. Truely gets only Smiles Per Gallon.
Fun to hear the history, Fred. Tx
Well now you have me wanting to find a CJ3B I think they look rad. I had never seen one before this video. I always like the weird different stuff.
Great video Fred! Very informative to a non jeep guy like me
This has to be a movie
Ford vs. Willy's 😂
Great video Fred! Flat fender>>>any other vehicle ever made ever 🤙🤙
Im about 95% sure you are correct :)
The 5% I am in doubt about is my own lack of knowledge, not yours :)
Thank you :)
Awesome information. Can't wait to see more.
My dad drove a dj jeep when he worked at the post-office. I loved riding in the jeep when he took me to work with him. It only had one seat and i had to sit on the mail bags. You cant do that anymore.
Fred.. my 51 Dodge M37 is so much like a M38 but on steroids.. there must be shared ideas after WWII between companies.. also the first Toyota 4x4 is or must be an inspiration of the jeep too.
Interesting I knew some stuff about jeeps but this was insightful I definitely think you should do more history on old 4x4 stuff.
Would love to see you build upon this with a CJ episode, a FSJ/Cherokee/Wagoneer, episode, and a Wrangler episode
Love it, New series! Go through all the Jeep linage. Then maybe VW bugs or something.
45 willys mb, and 46 CJ2a, I've had jeeps for 30 years
Thanks Professor Williams. What’s on tap for second semester? My national guard unit back in the early 60’s had M38’s and M38A1’s. They were cool.
I would rather watch videos like these over 90% of the garbage thats out there. Good info! Thanks Fred, been following since your magazine days.
Not as old as these but I have a 69 Jeepster Commando project I haven't started yet. I have a YJ with a lot of mods done to it already and have considered putting the Commando body on the YJ. Yes it'll have to be stretched a hair but the YJ already has 6 inches of stretch built in so I'm hoping it wont be too bad.
Thanks for the history lesson I found it very informative. I enjoy your videos
@4xFredWilliams can we get a tour of your Jeep collection? I'd love to see that
have a 73 cj5, frame beautied up with a 74 360. The original 304 is in the garage on a stand, Some bright person over carb it and should be out for a good refresh
Fred build a conundrum M38,Mb,Gpw,Cj2a. Shovel hatchet slots both sides, removable gage plate, glove box, and tailgate. Excellent information but what about the cj6?
The CJ3B is like the FJ55 in that it’s ugly enough that it’s cool. I like both. Great video Fred. Thanks!
I think we need a CJ history lesson next lol. Just picked up a 62’ CJ5.
That was awesome! Especially the end.
9 slots my favorite look
I had a 53 CJ3B that was all original and running when I was in high school 1993-94. But being a stupid teenager I sold it. Found it in an old farmer's barn. He used it to plow his field.
Nice info fred good job 👍
The red GPW is my favorite.
I have always wanted a ford jeep. Maybe some day. Funny story, my dad was in the army and just before the Korean war and was assigned to be a driver on post, He agreed and asked if he could pick out his own jeep. They said okay. He got the only one that had a heater in it. One day he had to give a Major a ride, The Major notice the heater and the next day that jeep was gone. lol..
Thank you very much Fred! I learned a lot from your wealth of knowledge. Did they use some of those CJ3A’s on‘Fantasy Island’?
The red gpw is my favorite.
You’re really making me want to get on my 3A project!
No better time than tomorrow.
@@Bighorn_built Except, customer’s projects come first. They pay. 😂
Thanks for the great history lesson!
You forgot to mention the Hotchkiss M201
Prob the best flat fender made as a Willys MB made under license in France by Hotchkiss with 27,000 odd Government contract production runs, identical to Willys MB of WW2 but stronger chassis, suspension, 24 volt electrics, L134 gear drive cam with Solex carb, popular here in UK and seem to also be in Australia, don’t think many are in USA?
There were also 6 known Civilian C201s made in 69/70 before Hotchkiss factory closed in France, i own the 5th one made - the 5th last factory Willys MB, only found this out a few months ago 😁👍
Cheers Bruce
Learned to drive in my dad’s CJ5 at 11 years old.
The next car I buy will hopefully be a Flatty. I think a CJ3B with a Kubota V2203 would be perfect. If the cost wasn't so high a Mitsubishi built 3B would be primo
Fred what are you putting that pto winch on? That's in the background there. You finally getting to the FC lol
That was fun, thanks Fred
You should do another one of these but on the ford highboy/early 4x4s
Awesome video! But dang, now you've got me on marketplace looking at things I don't need!
Thank you substitute teacher Mr. Williams
I had a 1960 M38 that had a rear fill gas tank it came from a air force Base wish I still had it
Good stuff man. CJ5 class would be cool.
Great! Very interesting 👍
Amazing lesson
Enjoyed the history lesson
I really wanna figure out if there's a way to retrofit a Roxor fuel tank. Those are underneath and not gonna rust
17:46 Very interesting how similar the story is to the dodge power wagon
So I guess I have a 45-49 CJ2a - thanks for that. Just wish someone had not taken all the tags off of it to verify and eventually push through the DMV. Maybe the locked up I-134 will give me a clue.
Great vid! Thanks.