Sunday, September 16, 2012

Oh yeah, this blog was originally about my Jeep

My Jeep's been sorta acting up the last few months where the tranny would slip a bit if I was too hard on the gas.  Three of my pals helped me out in this department.  Jay and Justin were both under the truck for about 8 hours trying to yank the think in my driveway.


Let's just say there was a lot of cursing and hurling of wrenches and insults.



A few days after they got the tranny out, it was off to my pal Roy for a rebuild.  He had the thing apart, cleaned and half-way reassembled in under three hours.  It was like watching a surgeon at work, you had to have been there.  The thing was covered in an inch of mud and you could barely find the bolts, but it was barely a hindrance for him. 


Apparently, it's bad if these discs have metal exposed....it means their worn out.



He had the parts so cleaned, I thought it would be a shame to reinstall the tranny back onto my filthy truck.


Roy playing with the "widow maker"


These were just a few of the parts he removed from the transmission.  There were like a thousand pieces all over the workbench and he had the order all in his head.  I was getting a headache just thinking about what order they were supposed to be in.

1 comment:

  1. Hello! I will be looking forward to visit your page again and for your other posts as well. Thank you for sharing your thoughts about jeep in your area. I am glad to stop by your site and know more about jeep. Keep it up! This is a good read.
    The Jeep has been widely imitated around the world, including in France by Delahaye and by Hotchkiss et Cie (after 1954, Hotchkiss manufactured Jeeps under license from Willys), and in Japan by Mitsubishi Motors and Toyota. The utilitarian good looks of the original Jeep have been hailed by industrial designers and museum curators alike. The Museum of Modern Art described the Jeep as a masterpiece of functionalist design, and has periodically exhibited the Jeep as part of its collection. Ernie Pyle called the Jeep, along with the Coleman G.I. Pocket Stove, "the two most important pieces of noncombat equipment ever developed." Jeeps became even more famous following the war, as they became available on the surplus market. Some ads claimed to offer "Jeeps still in the factory crate." This legend persisted for decades, despite the fact that Jeeps were never shipped from the factory in crates.
    A large number of color and style choices: Jeep North Shore

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