This will be my 2nd attempt at a build thread. I had big plans of going faster than Ricky Bobby in my first thread, then life. Moving on... Last Monday I took possession of a 1949 Willys Overland Jeepster. These. are. cool. Just ask any Shriner. Willis (I name all my vehicles Willis) has been in a barn....er, garage (it's cooler to say barn, right?) since somewhere around 1995 until last Monday. The old owner passed away last July and left everything to his son. Everything included a GTO, a 59 Dodge truck restomod that was more camaro than truck, a 79 Warlock and this old dusty jeep. The jeep did not run and had been in the same spot for as long as the kid could remember. The jeep was more a burden to the son as he had running mopars to play with and this jeep was taking up space. I made an offer, he accepted and these pictures were of it being rolled into the sun for the first time in 20 years, a week ago: The Jeepster seems to be pretty original. There were only 19K of these built over a 3 year period. As the story goes, Willys built the Jeepster because they were really only selling Jeeps to farmers. They wanted a vehicle that would appeal to the younger GI's returning from the war who loved their wartime jeeps, but wanted a hot rod. Willys didn't have a lot of money to invest in new tooling, so a lot of the Jeepster is actually truck / panel wagon parts. The idea never really took as the car was under powered and there were cheaper options out there. They sold the last few Jeepsters they built in 1950 in 1951 and killed the idea. As found, Willis is missing the head to his flat head four engine. The engine itself is seized, but everything else seems to be in good working order. I've never dabbled with a 6 volt system, this should be fun. I've spent some time cleaning it up and have been pouring a cocktail into the cylinders. I was able to pull all of the head studs, but there was one pesky guy who didn't want to let go. I was able to get it free'd up though:
https://www.youtube.com/embed/hWcXOGrKeDw
I'm pretty excited about this project, I've always wanted one of these Jeepsters. I'm hoping to get the engine running so I can drive it around a bit and then I'll evaluate my build plan over the winter. If I have to replace the engine, I'll be putting something in it that is more in tune with what the GI's were expecting back when Willys developed the Jeepster.