You made my day, Thank You! I always tought that I had a CJ2a from 1946 and now You say I have CJ3a 1947! :-) The position light in the front is flush and with floor shift. 15" hubs. The Willys probably came to Sweden just after the II:nd War ended. The only early documentation is a plate on the engine saying "1957 P4 Skövde" which still are an regiment for Swedish Armys Armored troops. Around 1962 it moved to the weastcoast of Sweden into a Bandy ice rink as a plow truck. It got an old truck cabin mounted. I bought it 1980 and renovated it back to original. We drove it for some years with pleasure. Unused from 1990 until 2014 (!) when I made some effort and had it running again (My 3 kids drove it a summer). Now soon ending 2023 I'm preparing for the 2:nd full restoration. Rust, gearboxes. Ironically in 1980 I couldn't find any CJ2 windsheild but got a bargin on a CJ3 windsheild - Spirits of the Jeeps was guiding me??
Military vehicles of the time were somewhat different from their civilian counterparts. Production of Jeep vehicles was also licensed by Willys - Overland to several manufacturers worldwide including Hotchkisss of France. In 1946 the E.R.G.M. (Etablissement de Réserve Générale du Matériel Automobile) had been established to process what remained of some 22.000 WW2 surplus 'Jeeps' donated by the U.S. Army to France after those suitable for use had been retained by French armed forces. ERGM cobbled 'Jeeps' together from pieces parts and sold them on the civilian market through 1978, eventually being composed mostly of new Hotchkiss built parts. By 1953 Hotchkiss was licensed by Willys - Overland to produce and sell Jeep vehicles on the civilian market. Perhaps a local military or Jeep historian could fill you in on the Swedish Army's source for such vehicles?
Text from another 'site: The Swedish Army (Svenska armén) is one of a few military forces (along with Belgium, Switzerland, Spain and even Ireland) to have used the CJ-3A "civilian Jeep" for combat reconnaisance and as a weapons carrier, and possibly the only force to have mounted SS10 anti-tank missiles on CJ-3As in the 1950s. Research by military historian Leif Hellström indicates the Swedish Army initially received only ten WWII-surplus Willys MBs, but subsequently purchased more than 400 CJ-2A and CJ-3A models. Leif comments, "They were purchased directly through the Swedish agent for Willys, Scania-Vabis AB, and were not received as aid. They received some modest military modifications such as blackout lamps, as seen on this CJ-3A on maneuvers." The majority of the Jeeps were CJ-3As. One of the few photos of a CJ-2A Leif ran across in the Svenska armén files was this one with an m/42 machine gun (a Swedish version of the Browning .30-cal) mounted to fire through one side of the split windshield. Leif notes, "The windshield is fixed with a riveted-on wedge. The Jeep is camouflaged in the 1950-style Swedish camouflage of sand, green and brown. The crew is wearing leather coats, gloves and helmets usually worn by motorcycle couriers." (Image captions): Machine guns commonly appear in Riksarkivet photos of the CJ-3As in service, but the only provision made for them is the lowering of the windshield. This surplus CJ-3A, serial number 78777, complete with all its Svenska armén details, belongs to Stefan Emilsson. The placard holder on the front grille carries the flag of his regiment, the former Södermanland Armored Regiment. Blackout and position lights are mounted on the front frame, and the spare wheel on the hood. This hood-mounted spare was installed on many of the Jeeps, which is puzzling since it would prevent the windshield from being lowered for a machine gun. Another CJ-3A, preserved in the Swedish Army Museum (Armémuseum) in Stockholm, has a replacement canvas top. The Jeep was reportedly acquired from an engineering regiment in 1973, although it appears to have been off the books for some time prior to that, and has been given a fake military serial number, 0001. The blackout and position lamps on the museum's Willys are mounted directly on the front bumper, as seen in a front view (220K JPEG). An archival photo of CJ-3A 78827 (320K JPEG) shows its auxiliary lamps mounted on the front fenders, and an interesting mixture of tires. A military catalogue page dated January 1952, for the Terrängbil 1/2 t ("Off-road vehicle 1/2 ton") gives Swedish military type number 902B for the CJ-3A. Leif adds, "It wasn't used in huge numbers but there were enough for it to be considered a standard vehicle. The Terrängbil 1/2 t designation was the same for the MB, CJ-2A and CJ-3A, while their respective Swedish military type numbers were 901, 902A and 902B." The picture is a Willys-Overland illustration (40K JPEG) with the hood-mounted spare tire added. A great Riksarkivet photo shows a pair of 902Bs heading out on snow patrol. Standard location for two jerry cans is on the rear wheelwells, leaving the tailgate free for other gear, in this case the cross-country skis and poles. The crew of 78787 is probably happy they have to keep their windshield up. But they might want to get 21816 out in front with the firepower. In warmer weather, 78783 has had some foliage applied as cover for its machine gunner. Here's another unusual photo; the rain dictates having the canvas up, but they're going to want to keep the convoy speed slow with their windshield down like that. In addition to the machine gun, 78775 is carrying multiple ammunition canisters for a Carl Gustaf Granatgevär m/48 84mm recoilless rifle. This frame from a late 1950s film shows a Swedish Jeep with a prototype installation of the Bofors 90mm recoilless rifle, later installed on Volvo vehicles. Once again, the windshield has to be down to provide clearance. It's surprising the Army didn't install the M38 split windshield kit from Willys which would have fit the CJ-3A, and was designed with a gap for the barrel. Leif Hellström provides the story on this Svenska armén photo: "Sweden put six Jeeps to an interesting use. They were converted to carry French SS10 anti-tank missiles in 1957-58 and it seems a platoon was set up for testing purposes. The Jeeps are just mentioned as being Terrängbil 1/2 t in documents so they could have been any version, but at least one was a CJ-3A: vehicle 78887 seen here has a 3A windshield." "The same missile mount -- the whole box at the rear -- was also used briefly on Jeeps by other countries, including France on the M201 and the United States on the M38A1C, but it seems Sweden was the only one to use it on CJs." Note: when France and other countries moved from the SS10 to the next-generation ENTAC missiles, the Belgian Army mounted their ENTAC launchers on The Belgian Army CJ-3A. The Swedish Army's first combat in the 20th century was in fact peacekeeping missions in Africa and the Middle East. Leif says, "Only one or two Swedish Jeeps were sent to the Sinai. The other ones used by the Swedes there were provided by the UN." This photo shows the loading of CJ-2A 25523 for transport to Egypt in 1956. See also UN Jeeps in the Sinai and Military Jeeps in the Congo, Part 6. "The 902Bs (CJ-3As) were largely phased out in the early- and mid-1960s when the Volvo 903 (290K JPEG) -- seen in the foreground here -- was purchased in numbers. A single M38A1 was tested by the Swedish Army, and there were two CJ-3Bs (also given type number 902B) in use with the Fortification Administration, the last one being sold in 1967." Thanks to Leif Hellström, Stefan Emilsson, the Military Archives of Sweden (Riksarkivet), and the Swedish Army Museum (Armémuseum) for photos used under CC BY 4.0. -- Derek Redmond Source - The CJ3B Page.
Great jeeps. Don’t forget the 1945 CJ-2A. Also column shift, etc. Only 2 colors, pasture green and harvest tan were available for the column shift jeeps(up to serial number 38,221). After that serial number, more colors and floor shift transmission. The recessed parking lights were available from ‘45 into the 1947 year until serial number 97,740. Great collection of jeeps. Thanks for sharing
Cool jeeps and cool tops. Dont know about you but ive never been a fan of the column shifters on any vehicle. Part of the history and museum i know. Your collection has me drooling. How you keep up is impressive.
thanks! My first jeep was a 3b, I am getting another. Mainly looking for body/frame/title as I converted it to a dauntless v6 and eventually sm420 with a advance adapters to the t18. I also upgraded the fuel tank and moved it to the back. Bruce tucson
Friendly word of caution: If you acquire one, you'll wind up with more. They seem to sniff each other out like stray dogs. And yes, they _are_ a blast!
The hardware and windows seem original, but the fabric seems way to go to be 70+ years old. I'm guessing the PO paid an upholstery shop to reuse all the original stuff with new fabric.
Beautifully made video, excellent setting, comprehensive explanations, and sensible off-roading by experienced drivers. The jeeps are awesome and look great for their age. My only concern is whether you gave the old engines a proper warm-up before running them hard through the sections.
You're livin' the life! I loved driving my stock '48 CJ2A (and also the GPW with 283 Chevy) on BLM lands of Northern Arizona this time of year. That '46 is top shelf. Canvas on the 2A and #B looks perfect. Who does those?
@-oiiio-3993 definitely ouch. Lol. And I wrecked my 67chevell, dead centered a tree. Put the motor in a 57 nomad 2 door wagon, went in and out of a ditch at 120 plus mph according to the chp. Sold the motor after that one Lol. In the words of that great philosopher, STUPID IS AS STUPID DOES 🙄 ( FOREST GUMP)
Hello filminizi begendim ve abone oldum .Benimde bir willysim var 55 model benzinli 2200 motor 2006 dan beri kullanmiyorum. Tabi bu araba Türkiyede bende Almanyadayim gelecek sene emekli olacagim ve ozaman tekrar willysi ayaga kaldiracagim.Sorum su buna kac ayar yag koyayim 10w40 , 15w40 veya 20w50 birde bo motorlar kac liter yag aliyor. selamlar mehmet
Thanks for pointing out how to correctly pronounce Willys. I first learned that some years ago from this 1954 video: ua-cam.com/video/MuYbchw510Q/v-deo.html
Love how you use your jeeps and they aren’t just museum pieces.
Thank you!
love your comments...
Thangkyou Jeep guy...
I love jeep..
love your jeeps from Northeast India..❤||||||||❤
I agree. Museum rot is just as bad as rust
Those are amazing and in great shape
Thank you!
Luar biasa jeep jadul banjak penqqemar sampai pelosok desa😅😅😅
GOOD JEEPS,,,,,
You made my day, Thank You!
I always tought that I had a CJ2a from 1946 and now You say I have CJ3a 1947! :-)
The position light in the front is flush and with floor shift. 15" hubs.
The Willys probably came to Sweden just after the II:nd War ended. The only early documentation is a plate on the engine saying "1957 P4 Skövde" which still are an regiment for Swedish Armys Armored troops. Around 1962 it moved to the weastcoast of Sweden into a Bandy ice rink as a plow truck. It got an old truck cabin mounted. I bought it 1980 and renovated it back to original. We drove it for some years with pleasure. Unused from 1990 until 2014 (!) when I made some effort and had it running again (My 3 kids drove it a summer). Now soon ending 2023 I'm preparing for the 2:nd full restoration. Rust, gearboxes.
Ironically in 1980 I couldn't find any CJ2 windsheild but got a bargin on a CJ3 windsheild - Spirits of the Jeeps was guiding me??
Military vehicles of the time were somewhat different from their civilian counterparts.
Production of Jeep vehicles was also licensed by Willys - Overland to several manufacturers worldwide including Hotchkisss of France. In 1946 the E.R.G.M. (Etablissement de Réserve Générale du Matériel Automobile) had been established to process what remained of some 22.000 WW2 surplus 'Jeeps' donated by the U.S. Army to France after those suitable for use had been retained by French armed forces. ERGM cobbled 'Jeeps' together from pieces parts and sold them on the civilian market through 1978, eventually being composed mostly of new Hotchkiss built parts. By 1953 Hotchkiss was licensed by Willys - Overland to produce and sell Jeep vehicles on the civilian market.
Perhaps a local military or Jeep historian could fill you in on the Swedish Army's source for such vehicles?
Text from another 'site:
The Swedish Army (Svenska armén) is one of a few military forces (along with Belgium, Switzerland, Spain and even Ireland) to have used the CJ-3A "civilian Jeep" for combat reconnaisance and as a weapons carrier, and possibly the only force to have mounted SS10 anti-tank missiles on CJ-3As in the 1950s.
Research by military historian Leif Hellström indicates the Swedish Army initially received only ten WWII-surplus Willys MBs, but subsequently purchased more than 400 CJ-2A and CJ-3A models.
Leif comments, "They were purchased directly through the Swedish agent for Willys, Scania-Vabis AB, and were not received as aid. They received some modest military modifications such as blackout lamps, as seen on this CJ-3A on maneuvers."
The majority of the Jeeps were CJ-3As. One of the few photos of a CJ-2A Leif ran across in the Svenska armén files was this one with an m/42 machine gun (a Swedish version of the Browning .30-cal) mounted to fire through one side of the split windshield.
Leif notes, "The windshield is fixed with a riveted-on wedge. The Jeep is camouflaged in the 1950-style Swedish camouflage of sand, green and brown. The crew is wearing leather coats, gloves and helmets usually worn by motorcycle couriers."
(Image captions):
Machine guns commonly appear in Riksarkivet photos of the CJ-3As in service, but the only provision made for them is the lowering of the windshield.
This surplus CJ-3A, serial number 78777, complete with all its Svenska armén details, belongs to Stefan Emilsson. The placard holder on the front grille carries the flag of his regiment, the former Södermanland Armored Regiment.
Blackout and position lights are mounted on the front frame, and the spare wheel on the hood. This hood-mounted spare was installed on many of the Jeeps, which is puzzling since it would prevent the windshield from being lowered for a machine gun.
Another CJ-3A, preserved in the Swedish Army Museum (Armémuseum) in Stockholm, has a replacement canvas top. The Jeep was reportedly acquired from an engineering regiment in 1973, although it appears to have been off the books for some time prior to that, and has been given a fake military serial number, 0001.
The blackout and position lamps on the museum's Willys are mounted directly on the front bumper, as seen in a front view (220K JPEG).
An archival photo of CJ-3A 78827 (320K JPEG) shows its auxiliary lamps mounted on the front fenders, and an interesting mixture of tires.
A military catalogue page dated January 1952, for the Terrängbil 1/2 t ("Off-road vehicle 1/2 ton") gives Swedish military type number 902B for the CJ-3A. Leif adds, "It wasn't used in huge numbers but there were enough for it to be considered a standard vehicle. The Terrängbil 1/2 t designation was the same for the MB, CJ-2A and CJ-3A, while their respective Swedish military type numbers were 901, 902A and 902B."
The picture is a Willys-Overland illustration (40K JPEG) with the hood-mounted spare tire added.
A great Riksarkivet photo shows a pair of 902Bs heading out on snow patrol. Standard location for two jerry cans is on the rear wheelwells, leaving the tailgate free for other gear, in this case the cross-country skis and poles.
The crew of 78787 is probably happy they have to keep their windshield up. But they might want to get 21816 out in front with the firepower.
In warmer weather, 78783 has had some foliage applied as cover for its machine gunner.
Here's another unusual photo; the rain dictates having the canvas up, but they're going to want to keep the convoy speed slow with their windshield down like that.
In addition to the machine gun, 78775 is carrying multiple ammunition canisters for a Carl Gustaf Granatgevär m/48 84mm recoilless rifle.
This frame from a late 1950s film shows a Swedish Jeep with a prototype installation of the Bofors 90mm recoilless rifle, later installed on Volvo vehicles. Once again, the windshield has to be down to provide clearance. It's surprising the Army didn't install the M38 split windshield kit from Willys which would have fit the CJ-3A, and was designed with a gap for the barrel.
Leif Hellström provides the story on this Svenska armén photo: "Sweden put six Jeeps to an interesting use. They were converted to carry French SS10 anti-tank missiles in 1957-58 and it seems a platoon was set up for testing purposes. The Jeeps are just mentioned as being Terrängbil 1/2 t in documents so they could have been any version, but at least one was a CJ-3A: vehicle 78887 seen here has a 3A windshield."
"The same missile mount -- the whole box at the rear -- was also used briefly on Jeeps by other countries, including France on the M201 and the United States on the M38A1C, but it seems Sweden was the only one to use it on CJs."
Note: when France and other countries moved from the SS10 to the next-generation ENTAC missiles, the Belgian Army mounted their ENTAC launchers on The Belgian Army CJ-3A.
The Swedish Army's first combat in the 20th century was in fact peacekeeping missions in Africa and the Middle East. Leif says, "Only one or two Swedish Jeeps were sent to the Sinai. The other ones used by the Swedes there were provided by the UN."
This photo shows the loading of CJ-2A 25523 for transport to Egypt in 1956. See also UN Jeeps in the Sinai and Military Jeeps in the Congo, Part 6.
"The 902Bs (CJ-3As) were largely phased out in the early- and mid-1960s when the Volvo 903 (290K JPEG) -- seen in the foreground here -- was purchased in numbers. A single M38A1 was tested by the Swedish Army, and there were two CJ-3Bs (also given type number 902B) in use with the Fortification Administration, the last one being sold in 1967."
Thanks to Leif Hellström, Stefan Emilsson, the Military Archives of Sweden (Riksarkivet), and the Swedish Army Museum (Armémuseum) for photos used under CC BY 4.0. -- Derek Redmond
Source - The CJ3B Page.
Great jeeps. Don’t forget the 1945 CJ-2A. Also column shift, etc. Only 2 colors, pasture green and harvest tan were available for the column shift jeeps(up to serial number 38,221). After that serial number, more colors and floor shift transmission. The recessed parking lights were available from ‘45 into the 1947 year until serial number 97,740. Great collection of jeeps. Thanks for sharing
Yup, the Tuxedo Park Mark IV as well. We omit a lot of information to keep the video moving. Thank you for watching!
Nice tops
Thanks!
😮 outstanding video. Great collection. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you!
Awesome footage. Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it
Cool jeeps and cool tops. Dont know about you but ive never been a fan of the column shifters on any vehicle. Part of the history and museum i know. Your collection has me drooling. How you keep up is impressive.
@johndoe43 Thank you! I actually love driving the column shifts.
thanks! My first jeep was a 3b, I am getting another. Mainly looking for body/frame/title as I converted it to a dauntless v6
and eventually sm420 with a advance adapters to the t18. I also upgraded the fuel tank and moved it to the back.
Bruce tucson
Perfect Trio
I agree!
Thanks for the history lesson, it would be nice if you had a mic so we could hear you, and the music wasn't so loud between voice clips.
Thanks for the feedback, we're adding a mic soon to better stabilize the sound modulation across the board. Glad you enjoyed it.
One of these days im going to get my hands on a old cj like the red one. Awesome find you got there.
They are a blast! Thank you.
Friendly word of caution:
If you acquire one, you'll wind up with more.
They seem to sniff each other out like stray dogs.
And yes, they _are_ a blast!
My dream collection!
Time to vying some of your collection to the Willys Reunion in Akron Ohio in May.
I'll take one of each please. Thanks for the video, absolutely loved it.
Thank you for watching!
Love your content, interested to learn about jeeps and how to build them.
Awesome, thank you!
Getting it!
Nunca había visto un willys palanca alta
Any idea who made the tops. Great looking Jeeps.
The hardware and windows seem original, but the fabric seems way to go to be 70+ years old. I'm guessing the PO paid an upholstery shop to reuse all the original stuff with new fabric.
Would that you could still get a whole canvas top and doors for modern Jeeps.
What is the wheel colour on the 46
Unfortunately, I don't know the color code.
I have a 46 2a…..really clean. Have ya done any carb updates? Weber makes a redline model with intake that is supposed to give about 18%
Not to these. I prefer to keep them as original as possible.
Just picked up a 48.
Nice, you'll love it!
Beautifully made video, excellent setting, comprehensive explanations, and sensible off-roading by experienced drivers. The jeeps are awesome and look great for their age. My only concern is whether you gave the old engines a proper warm-up before running them hard through the sections.
Thank you. They definitely get warmed up first. A lot happens off camera that you dont get to see.
You're livin' the life!
I loved driving my stock '48 CJ2A (and also the GPW with 283 Chevy) on BLM lands of Northern Arizona this time of year.
That '46 is top shelf. Canvas on the 2A and #B looks perfect. Who does those?
Thanks for watching! The tops were already on those when I picked them up, but Kaiserwillys.com is a good source.
@@therealjeepguy I am familiar with KW, but these tops I have not seen.
I would like to have one. 👍
Where did your tops come from?
It came with the Jeep when I got it.
Awesome video. Just found your channel. Subscribed cause I want to see all of these Jeeps lol
Awesome thank you!
@@therealjeepguy you’re welcome. Can’t wait to see more.
Great video, where did you get the top for the CJ2a? Thanks
It came with the Jeep when we bought it from the original owner. We also have a half cab soft top for it as well.
@@therealjeepguy Is there a maker's name on the canvas?
Dear sir, are these vehicles available for sale?
No sorry, I've been rescuing Jeeps for years. I'm more of a buyer of Jeeps.
Had a 302 ferd in my 46. Darn near killed me. 😅 broke my neck and back .
Ouch.
My 'daily' runs a hopped up 225 Buick 'Odd Fire' V6.
@-oiiio-3993 definitely ouch. Lol. And I wrecked my 67chevell, dead centered a tree. Put the motor in a 57 nomad 2 door wagon, went in and out of a ditch at 120 plus mph according to the chp.
Sold the motor after that one Lol. In the words of that great philosopher, STUPID IS AS STUPID DOES 🙄 ( FOREST GUMP)
@@commentsedited Ouch some more.
My first was a '56 Ford Customline Ranch Wagon (2 door). I called it my 'poor man's Nomad'.
Hello filminizi begendim ve abone oldum .Benimde bir willysim var 55 model benzinli 2200 motor 2006 dan beri kullanmiyorum.
Tabi bu araba Türkiyede bende Almanyadayim gelecek sene emekli olacagim ve ozaman tekrar willysi ayaga kaldiracagim.Sorum su buna kac ayar yag
koyayim 10w40 , 15w40 veya 20w50 birde bo motorlar kac liter yag aliyor. selamlar mehmet
oops not t18! dana 18 transfer case
Thanks for pointing out how to correctly pronounce Willys. I first learned that some years ago from this 1954 video: ua-cam.com/video/MuYbchw510Q/v-deo.html
cant hear
We have microphones now!
Cual es el teléfono de ustedes tengo uno original y quisiera sé del Clup vivo aquí en sabana grande
Can i come play with you?
Absolutely! :)