Tacoma
Et incurventur ante non
- Location
- far enough away
For years I championed the Jeep Wagoneer as an early pioneer in many important 4wd features, maybe not the very first in anything, but the first to actually make it common and sort of set a standard: clean underbellies (only driveshafts stick out! sweet), first luxury SUV ( the Super Wagoneer), popularizing a rugged sort of "do-anything" vehicle that wasn't a burly truck. That they used basically the same body style for nearly 30 years without it looking THAT dated is impressive. The 1991 Grand Wagoneer was also the last US production vehicle with a carb.
But one thing has eluded me in all those years of praise: proof of Jeeps 1962-issue (1963 model year, go Wagoneer!) IFS 4wd option. No one believes me. I saw ONE in a junkyard somewhere in the middle of nowhere but didnt' get pics. It is with great glee and delight in odd engineering that I present you this link to my friend and longtime FSJ historian/fan John Meister's site, where you will see a beautiful set of pics of a very, very strange Dana setup.
It's linked, with an interesting setup. The axle is sort of a split-housing Dana 27 maybe? with boots on the end of the axle tubes, and some kind of A-arms on top. Anyway check it out here http://wagoneers.com/FSJ/rigs/63_ifs_rice/ALL.html and marvel at the oddity of it all. SCROLL DOWN TO SKIP FSJ INTERIOR AND ENGINE SHOTS
But one thing has eluded me in all those years of praise: proof of Jeeps 1962-issue (1963 model year, go Wagoneer!) IFS 4wd option. No one believes me. I saw ONE in a junkyard somewhere in the middle of nowhere but didnt' get pics. It is with great glee and delight in odd engineering that I present you this link to my friend and longtime FSJ historian/fan John Meister's site, where you will see a beautiful set of pics of a very, very strange Dana setup.
It's linked, with an interesting setup. The axle is sort of a split-housing Dana 27 maybe? with boots on the end of the axle tubes, and some kind of A-arms on top. Anyway check it out here http://wagoneers.com/FSJ/rigs/63_ifs_rice/ALL.html and marvel at the oddity of it all. SCROLL DOWN TO SKIP FSJ INTERIOR AND ENGINE SHOTS