1942 willys ford jeep found in barn
#1
1942 ****** ford jeep found in barn
hello, my name is jack today I was helping a friend from school with some hay and saw I jeep way in the back of the barn and started asking some questions and said he would sell it to me for 300$ Its green, hard top and has a flat head in-line 4. Very little rust, everything's solid even the doors and ran when it was parked a few years ago. Any info would be greatly appreciated also wondering about its value?
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#7
All standard production WW2 Jeeps, and even the first prototype civilian Jeeps, had the full-floating axle. Ford built the jeeps under the ****** pattern, hence the W in GPW. Granted, there were some minor difference in brackets and other items, but all drivetrain components were identical so as to not have differing parts for items on the same basic chassis.
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#8
#9
You are almost right. The GPW used the ****** designed "Go-Devil" engine. Some of the prototypes and early GPs used the tractor engine, but not the "GPW", which means G-government, P-80" wb, W-****** pattern. ****** won the contract, Ford was the second supplier, but had to make everything interchange with the ******. I read somewhere that Ford manufactured at least some of the ****** engines for the MB and GPW; the heads and engine bolts destined for GPWs had Ford script markings on them.
#10
****** mb
i have a 42 that i also found in a barn 30 years ago. im older now and the jeep is in my barn for the time being. having a sound body is rare. the 42 came equipped with a canvas top with hoops, no sides and no doors. it also had no heater, and hand operated wipers. the front and rear axles were; front-spicer, model 25, rear, model 25 full float. the frame and running gear are weak, more power WILL break parts. the engine is low comp. 140cu. fuel mileage was rated at 8mpg although it was capable of running kerosene, diesel, or gasoline with no more than a timing adjustment.
garthr
garthr
#11
i have a 42 that i also found in a barn 30 years ago. im older now and the jeep is in my barn for the time being. having a sound body is rare. the 42 came equipped with a canvas top with hoops, no sides and no doors. it also had no heater, and hand operated wipers. the front and rear axles were; front-spicer, model 25, rear, model 25 full float. the frame and running gear are weak, more power WILL break parts. the engine is low comp. 140cu. fuel mileage was rated at 8mpg although it was capable of running kerosene, diesel, or gasoline with no more than a timing adjustment.
garthr
garthr
Jeeps, or any carbureted engine, can burn a gasoline-favored mixture of the above mentioned fuels, but certainly not diesel straight. Think about it, if you could simply burn diesel in a gas-burner, everyone would have done it years ago when diesel was much cheaper than gas. WW2 Jeeps had the same carburetor (Carter WO) and fuel pump as civilian Jeeps.
#12
I think that is untrue. The later M-series 2.5 and 5 ton military trucks had a multi-fuel Continental engine that couldburn various petroleum products, but the pump had different orifices depending on the viscosity of the fuel.
Jeeps, or any carbureted engine, can burn a gasoline-favored mixture of the above mentioned fuels, but certainly not diesel straight. Think about it, if you could simply burn diesel in a gas-burner, everyone would have done it years ago when diesel was much cheaper than gas. WW2 Jeeps had the same carburetor (Carter WO) and fuel pump as civilian Jeeps.
Jeeps, or any carbureted engine, can burn a gasoline-favored mixture of the above mentioned fuels, but certainly not diesel straight. Think about it, if you could simply burn diesel in a gas-burner, everyone would have done it years ago when diesel was much cheaper than gas. WW2 Jeeps had the same carburetor (Carter WO) and fuel pump as civilian Jeeps.
garthr
#13
i see your point. ive never personally done this , but have read about it. at forums.aaca.org and jalopnik.com are some examples listed of old military multi fuel engines. i also think that mixing an oil like diesel would be necessary to cut the viscosity for carbuetion. also, the 1st 1,555 jeeps produced by ****** were model ma. these would be from 1940 or 41 and extremely rare.
garthr
garthr
My grandfather would mix gas to diesel 5:1 to burn in his new JD Model D in 1949. It wasn't unheard of. Any mixture beyond that caused smoke and power loss, as I was told.
#14
When I mentioned the "M-series", I'm referring to the post WW2 vehicles. Examples: M38-military CJ3a, M38A1-military CJ5, Dodge M37-replacement for 3/4 ton WC Dodges, M135 & 211-military GMC 2.5 ton, M35-multi-make 2.5 ton, and so on. Sometime in the 60s, Continental developed a multi-fuel engine for the 6X6s.
My grandfather would mix gas to diesel 5:1 to burn in his new JD Model D in 1949. It wasn't unheard of. Any mixture beyond that caused smoke and power loss, as I was told.
My grandfather would mix gas to diesel 5:1 to burn in his new JD Model D in 1949. It wasn't unheard of. Any mixture beyond that caused smoke and power loss, as I was told.
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