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Show Us Your Jeep!

Discussion in 'Builds and Fabricators Forum' started by Patrick, Apr 8, 2009.

  1. 68BuickV6

    68BuickV6 Well-Known Member

    At Azusa Canyon (San Gabriel OHV area) early this year or late last year.
    Did 10 times better than those new fancy JKs :twisted:

    [​IMG]


    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Oct 25, 2015
    DieselJeep likes this.
  2. scott milliner

    scott milliner Master Fabricator

    Re: Picture thread

    Just wanted to update my Jeep picture. It has been a while.
    Before. (1990's photo.)
    [​IMG][/URL][/IMG]

    And now. (Cell phone.)
    [​IMG][/URL][/IMG]
     
    Last edited: Oct 25, 2015
  3. scott milliner

    scott milliner Master Fabricator

    Did you make it up the bank?
     
  4. BJHitson60

    BJHitson60 Member

    Nice action shots from Azusa Canyon!
     
  5. 68BuickV6

    68BuickV6 Well-Known Member


    Many, many times. Easy peesy with a Power Lock. Don't have any good pics of it though. A lot of open diff 4x4s were struggling. I only had a hard time when I started picking the stuff with real deep holes. My open front diff did make those hard.

    [​IMG]
     
    DieselJeep likes this.
  6. army grunt

    army grunt Member

    Last edited: Oct 26, 2015
  7. DieselJeep

    DieselJeep New Member

  8. jeepermc

    jeepermc Active Member

    Is that the same basic motor they used in the Isuzu Pup and Luv trucks? 1.9L in a Chevette and 2.2L in the trucks? I have a friend with a 4x4 converted postal jeep with the 2.2L out of a 4x4 Pup.
     
  9. jeepermc

    jeepermc Active Member

    Did you ever actually find any 192 Perkins motors?? I've been searching for a few years now for a spare.... Only ever seen one on Craigslist halfway across the country and never got a response back.
     
  10. Fly Navy

    Fly Navy Member

    I did not find a Perkins 192, but neither did I really search very hard for one, as you say they can be hard to find particularly in an automotive application. You can find the 192's and 203's alot of times in Massey Ferguson 65 tractors. They were used in a lot of agricultural applications through the 60's. Some of these had the same block as the automotive application but some had a tractor specific block so you have to be pay close attention.
     
  11. jeepermc

    jeepermc Active Member

    I've figured out I think that the only major difference between the 192 and 203 is the bore. I didn't know there was a potential tractor specific block? Cast in bellhousing or something?
     
  12. DieselJeep

    DieselJeep New Member

    The C223 and C223T are the larger pushrod motors in trucks, even the S10 diesel. Most Themo King reefers have the lil C201 in them. That's where I get the 12v glow plugs from.

    The 1.8L 4FB1 was in Chevette or Pontiac t1000 diesels and Isuzu I-Mark diesels exclusively, here in the US. Common overseas esp in Austrailia Indonesia and the like, even in pumps and generators. Rare here.
    Steel ring lands, piston squirters, designed and built FOR a turbo. Like a Japanese reverse engineered mirror image VW idi 1.6l or 1.9L tdi(or whatev haha), improved and beefed up, with a much better cross flow OHC head. Factory redline of 5,400rpm. As close to a gasser motor behaving diesel I have ever seen, personally.
    And the venerable and readily modifiable VE pump, although my NA pump is a KiKi diesel license. Have a rare C223T IP lined up for the turbo install, to be modded with a VW CSD, and VW diesel and cummins diesel typical tuning tricks and mods. Bigger plunger, and boost aneroid, and a manual timing advance for easier cold starts.

    Perkins are kinda rare. We have a early 70's CAT forklift with one in it. Boss overheated it, and took 2 years to find another.
     
    Last edited: Nov 10, 2015
  13. jeepermc

    jeepermc Active Member

    Yeah.... tell me about it. lol
     
  14. DieselJeep

    DieselJeep New Member

    That is a very sweet CJ5, '68BuickV6!
    I love the looks on everyone's faces.

    Some hater-ation(probably indignant SUV or truck owner who thought their vehicle was capable or awesome sauce), but mostly amused adoration and enthusiasm.

    And the upside of this swap. In 2 weeks driving, to and from work, errands, and social whatnot, I have used less than 3 gal of fuel. I am guesstimating roughly close to 30MPG city, in a 4x4 barn door on 31's. I just got the fuel gauge working, because I got tired of trying to put $10@ 4gallons, and topping it off at $5, @ 2gal, once a week.

    I'll know more accurately in a week or so.
     
    Last edited: Nov 10, 2015
    jeepermc and 68BuickV6 like this.
  15. 68BuickV6

    68BuickV6 Well-Known Member

    Azusa canyon is all about playin' around. Lots of big built rigs go out there to hit the banks or hit the mud if the reservoir is low.
    Most stockish rigs have open diffs and don't get far on the banks or in the mud.
    So there were a few slightly irked vehicle owners who I think were wondering how I could do what they couldn't, but its all in good fun.
    ;)


    For most of us in Socal this is one of the closest places to wheel.



    Edit: Also please excuse the poorly run wires. At the time I had the bumper off the day before and slapped it back on without running the wiring behind it. Its neater now.
     
  16. DieselJeep

    DieselJeep New Member

    SoCAL huh? I grew up in East SF Bay Area.
     
  17. Updating my CJ's pics now that the rattle cans have been emptied!

    [​IMG]

    That was Saturday after the hood was painted. Here's yesterday in the morning sun on the satin finish.

    [​IMG]

    Feel much better with that red oxide primer gone off it!:p
     
  18. throwback

    throwback Member

    I spent a little bit of time this morning with a can of Turtle Wax Rubbing Compound just to satisfy my curiosity of whether the paint is shot on this rig or not. I'm pretty happily surprised what an improvement it made with the previously dull and stained paint.


    Before:

    [​IMG]



    After:

    [​IMG]
     
    69Willys likes this.
  19. uncamonkey

    uncamonkey Member

    Much better.
    A few years ago I was over at my neighbors house and his son showed up in his faded red Blazer. after a couple frostys we got the can of WD40 out, (I don't really like the stuff), sprayed and wiped the hood. The kid crashed the Blazer a few years later and the hood still looked better paintwise than the rest of the truck. Years ago when my father was in the Army Engineers they had to wash everything before a parade. After the wash, they would put a wipe of kerosene on the vehicles.
     
  20. FinoCJ

    FinoCJ 1970 CJ5 Staff Member

    Nice. Might be time to try the same thing here - I wash it off with water but try not to rub the paint much as it likes to come off on the rag (much as you described in an earlier post).