Home » Here’s Everything Wrong With The 200,000 Mile 1992 Jeep Comanche I’m About To Drive 850 Miles

Here’s Everything Wrong With The 200,000 Mile 1992 Jeep Comanche I’m About To Drive 850 Miles

Jeep Comanche Fix List Ts
ADVERTISEMENT

Yesterday I wrote about my flight from LA to Boise to get my first glance at a 1992 Jeep Comanche that I bought sight unseen. It was a magical moment; the vehicle — at least at midnight in the motel parking lot — looked even better than I expected. But now that the sun is out, I get to see this “MJ” Jeep for what it is. Here’s a look at all the (obvious) problems with the 200,000 mile Jeep Comanche that I’ll be spending the next few days driving 850 miles back to LA.

Right away, I’ll say that this Comanche – one of only 952 sold for the 1992 model-year, and probably one of only 200 or so 1992 4.0-liter 4×4 manual long-beds ever built — is in exactly the condition that the seller claimed, which is to say: great!

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

To be sure, it’s still a bit of a beat-up old truck, with scratches and dings everywhere to the point where I think this thing could be a tough sell to those who aren’t “in the know” when it comes to the Comanche’s greatness. But I don’t mind a well-used truck, so long as it’s solid, and this thing is rock solid.

The Body Is Rock-Solid

Comanche Front Left Comanche Side

First off, this MJ’s underbody is literally flawless. It looks like it just left the factory. Just look at this!:

ADVERTISEMENT

Comanche No Rust Comanche No Rust 2 Comanche No Rust 3 Comanche No Rust 4

As much as I’ve made a name for myself as a rust-cowboy, those days are over. Once a vehicle has started to rust, stopping it is a huge chore; given that I live in SoCal these days, I know that buying a solid truck means I’ll pretty much never have to worry about rust again. This Comanche should last forever.

Comanche Door Rust Comanche Ding 2 Comanche Bedside Rust

To be sure, there is a little bit of rust on the top-side of the body in the form of bubbling paint. I plan to just sand all that down and paint over it; after that, it will not be a problem ever again.

Comanche Rusty Exhaust

ADVERTISEMENT

There’s also a hole in the tailpipe where the hanger is supposed to be, but tailpipes rust pretty much everywhere, and it’s easy enough to replace.

The Paint Is Rough But I Don’t Care

Comanche Front Right

Speaking of paint, the most obvious aesthetic blemishes are found on the horizontal surfaces that share the largest radiative “view factor” with the sun. The hood’s paint is super faded and the clear-coat basically doesn’t exist:

Comanche Hood

The roof, too, looks rough:

ADVERTISEMENT

Comanche Roof

The sides of the truck look OK, but there is some missing clear coat on the right side, and scratches and chips abound.

Comanche Side Paint

Comanche Scratch

The tailgate and really the entire bed are covered in paint gouges, as should be the case with any well-used pickup.

ADVERTISEMENT

Comanche Tailgate

Overall, the paint is good enough for an old work truck. I may replace the hood at some point, and I’ll touch up the big scratches/rust spots, but then I’m just going to run it.

The Body Is ‘Straight’

Comanche Front Left Comanche Side

Whereas a Michigander would refer to a rust-free body as a “clean body,” a largely dent-free body is known as a “straight body.” And this Comanche has one! There are some small dings here and there, but actually — for a 30 year-old truck — the thing looks really good. The biggest imperfection in any panel is near the right taillight, though it’s subtle:

Little Ding Comanche

ADVERTISEMENT

The back of the cab has some dents at the back of the B-pillars right near that cab/bed gap; they’re a bit hard to see:

Comanche Little Dent 2

Especially considering how huge this Jeep’s rather flat panels are, it’s pretty amazing how few dings I see.

There Are Lots Of Leaks, And The Fluid Levels Are Low

Comanche Leak

One thing that I do not mess around with is fluids. The ramifications of neglecting fluids in a vehicle are so enormous relative to the modest price of new fluid that it’s silly to not religiously ensure you’ve got clean dino-juice in your transmission, transfer case, axles, and engine. So that was the first thing I checked before beginning my long journey back home, and what I found was leaks. Lots of them.

ADVERTISEMENT

Jeep people often joke: “If it’s not leaking, there’s no fluid in it.” And that’s somewhat true given how prevalent leaks are in 4.0-liter powered, AMC-designed Jeeps. But I had to make sure this Jeep wouldn’t blow its gearboxes in the middle of nowhere, Nevada, so I undid all the drain plugs and found: pretty much everything was low.

Comanche Walmart Comanche Oil

I squeezed some GL5 into the front and rear diffs, some insanely-expensive Redline GL4 into the transmission, and some cheap ATF into the transfer case; after checking the oil, I felt a lot more comfortable pointing my Comanche south towards SoCal.

The Engine Runs Great, But There’s Oil In The Air Filter And It Only Starts With Throttle

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by The Autopian (@theautopian)

In addition to checking the oil levels, I usually check my air filters. Admittedly, I should change the fuel filter as well, but I’m too lazy and I don’t want to deal with gasoline smell all over my arms.

ADVERTISEMENT

As you can see in the clip above, my air filter was covered in oil. This could mean one of two things: 1.  The engine’s piston rings aren’t sealing, and the pistons are basically pressurizing the crank case and shooting oil out of the vent tube into the air filter or 2. The rear crankcase vent tube is clogged.

Screenshot 2025 10 17 At 9.51.03 am
Image: Jeep

Combustion gases that get past the rings creates crankcase pressure, which has to go somewhere, because the last thing you want is to blow out all your gaskets (oil pan, valve cover, rear main seal, etc. — I’ve had this happen). In the case of a 4.0-liter engine, clean air flows into the crankcase from the air intake (just above the air filter), into the valve cover, and then it’s sucked into the air intake via a tube at the back of the valve cover.

If the tube at the back of the valve cover is clogged, the air pressure in the crankcase forces vapors into the intake, resulting in that black oily-goo in my oil filter. I’ve cleaned out the rear tube and fitting-orifice atop the valve cover, and I’ve replaced my air filter, so hopefully those paper pleats remain clean from here on. I’ll have to check my oil level and the status of that filter after a few miles of driving to see if I have problematic piston ring wear or not; I seriously hope I don’t. Because this motor is otherwise running great.

OK, mostly great. It won’t start in the morning unless I put the pedal all the way down. Then it runs rough for a bit, and then it’s all good. I’m not concerned about it for now, but it will — over time — bother me. Maybe it’s an issue with my idle air control valve; we’ll see.

The Driver’s Door Doesn’t Shut Right

Comanche Front Left 2

ADVERTISEMENT

Driving the Comanche,  I was reminded of how a former Chrysler coworker once called the XJ Cherokee on which it’s based the “NVH Wonder Of The World.” This thing is a bit of a rattletrap and its sharp corners cleave through the air like a garden shed.

Comanche Gap

Still, this Comanche sounds especially loud, and I later found out the reason is that the driver’s door doesn’t quite shut all the way. In fact, you can see daylight through the huge door gap at the top. I have to figure out how to get this door to fit better; I’m worried the welds on the hinges may be the culprit.

The Interior Needs A bit Of Work

Comanche Interior

The Comanche’s cab is tiny and simple, featuring a bench seat, a dash, two door panels, a carpet, a basic three-spoke steering wheel and not a whole lot else. Pretty much all of it needs work. Here’s the steering wheel:

ADVERTISEMENT

Comanche Steering

Here’s the dash:

Comanche Dash

Here’s the seat (well, part of it)

Comanche Seat

ADVERTISEMENT

And the door panels…well, they’re fine. They’re vinyl, after all, so they are easy enough to keep clean:Comanche Door Panel

Overall, This Thing Is Fantastic

The truck is rough around the edges. The cabin is fairly well worn, the bed is fairly well worn, the outside has scratches and dings and paint problems. And while that might make a modern economy car look janky, it doesn’t detract from an old Jeep pickup truck one bit.

Screenshot 2025 10 17 At 12.35.00 pm

Plus, from about 20 feet, the thing looks mint. It’ll look even better when I ditch that camper (I know this is controversial, but I want my trucks to look like trucks, not SUVs; plus, the cap makes the bed harder to use).

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
142 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
pizzaman09
pizzaman09
2 months ago

If you haven’t yet, join the Comanche Club forum, it’s possibly the friendliest corner of the Internet and every problem you mentioned has been fixed by a person in the forum who is more than willing to provide advice.

With respect to the door hinges, frequently the bores just wear out that the pins go into. My MJ has 276k miles on it, in order to fix my hinges, I filled the holes with JB weld and redrilled them to 1/4″. Put a couple of greased up bolts from the hardware store in for pins and called it a day. The hard part was actually getting the old roll pins out, ended up cutting them twice with a Dremel. If I lived closer I’d lend you a hand but I’m in PA.

Theotherotter
Member
Theotherotter
2 months ago

Replace the hood? Just paint it, the cowl and the roof satin black!

Crab People
Crab People
2 months ago

My Wrangler with the 4.0 has similar start issues. Pretty sure it is a bad check valve on the fuel pump that lets all the fuel in the lines drain back into the tank. I consider it a minor anti-theft deterrent.

Dest
Member
Dest
2 months ago

Idk if you mentioned it but this couldn’t have been cheap. A 92 with those options in that shape?

Dest
Member
Dest
2 months ago
Reply to  Dest

This is what I get for missing the first story. $6.5k is a steal for this. Well done.

Dug Deep
Dug Deep
2 months ago
Reply to  Dest

I’ve been watching these for a couple of months and in the SW people are asking 2-3X this price. Of course asking doesn’t mean getting.

OptionXIII
OptionXIII
2 months ago

One of the nicest things about the 4.0/AX15/NP231 driveline combo is that you can use the same oil in all of them.

Go to a Jeep dealership and buy oil for that manual transmission, and they will slide you over a few quarts of Mobil1 10W30 engine oil. And the NP231 also is pretty agnostic about what oil is in it. I worked with a guy that was involved in testing at New Process Gear, he said they used Mobil 1 engine oil quite a bit.

Dest
Member
Dest
2 months ago
Reply to  OptionXIII

This is true but my AX-15 definitely preferred some nicer fluid in it.

OptionXIII
OptionXIII
2 months ago
Reply to  Dest

I’m not saying you can’t use something better, but it wouldn’t be my first priority when I’m 850 miles from home or on the trail outside cell signal.

What do you run? I’ve got two AX15s torn down on my workbench now, I’m working to make one good one to swap into my XJ.

Crab People
Crab People
2 months ago
Reply to  OptionXIII

Mine shifted a lot better when I switched from motor oil to Redline MTF.

Adam EmmKay8 GTI
Adam EmmKay8 GTI
2 months ago
Reply to  Crab People

After changing whatever my XJ had to Pennzoil Synchromesh it shifted so much better and easier in winter.

Dest
Member
Dest
2 months ago
Reply to  OptionXIII

I’ve had redline in for… damn apparently 7 years. Probably time to change that, but the mileage isn’t that much. I’ll probably do redline again.

Fourmotioneer
Member
Fourmotioneer
2 months ago

Your PCV explanation uses the same term “air intake” to describe the air filter housing and the intake manifold but almost makes sense

“ In the case of a 4.0-liter engine, clean air flows into the crankcase from the *air filter cover* (just above the air filter), into the valve cover, and then it’s sucked into the air intake via a tube at the back of the valve cover.

If the tube at the back of the valve cover is clogged, the air pressure in the crankcase forces vapors into the *air filter cover*”

Replacing air intake with air filter cover (or whatever term you prefer) eliminates the confusion. Kept air intake in there to refer to intake manifold

Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
2 months ago

“There’s also a hole in the tailpipe where the hanger is supposed to be, but tailpipes rust pretty much everywhere, and it’s easy enough to replace”….

With a stainless steel system so it will never be a problem again.

“Overall, the paint is good enough for an old work truck. I may replace the hood at some point, and I’ll touch up the big scratches/rust spots, but then I’m just going to run it.”

Or wrap it. I seem to recall you know a guy who works miracles with derelict 200k Jeeps.

https://www.theautopian.com/how-a-junky-200000-mile-jeep-wrangler-yj-became-my-perfect-wedding-car/

“I have to figure out how to get this door to fit better”

Try this guy:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=mIAYxWCXF8A

Can you replace the Command Trac part time 4WD with a Select Trac full time system in these?

Last edited 2 months ago by Cheap Bastard
OptionXIII
OptionXIII
2 months ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

The Selec Trac NP242 can be swapped in place of the NP231. It never came from the factory behind a manual trans, but that combo has been done by quite a few people with no issue.

That said, since it’s not the way it came from the factory, I don’t think he’ll want to do that. Especially with so little need for full time mode in sunny SoCal.

Last edited 2 months ago by OptionXIII
Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
2 months ago
Reply to  OptionXIII

I sorta disagree. I found my XJ’s SelecTrak was useful when El Nino winters brought torrential rains to San Diego. There were times I’d come out of a parking structure to find my rear wheels in a gutter full of water and needing to pull into fast moving traffic quickly. If I was in 2WD the wheels would just spin but if I was in AWD I’d zoom out no problem. LA is also ringed by mountains that get snow. SelectTrac is good for ski weekends.

I can understand DT may want to keep as is but if it was me I’d select SelecTrak.

pizzaman09
pizzaman09
2 months ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

As much as I agree with your assessment, in those low traction situations, one could easily use part time 4×4 in the NP231 without risk of binding.

Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
2 months ago
Reply to  pizzaman09

Yeah but who wants to go back into 2WD the second grip returns?

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
2 months ago

I dig the look with the old guy truck cap. If you’re driving reasonable and tags are good, that setup is basically DUI proof. (Not advocating this of course)

Geekycop .
Geekycop .
2 months ago

My advice for the canopy is that you hang onto it for when you want to take Elise(NHRN) and Delmar(NHRN) camping etc. They can be a pain in the ass but having one available for dry space when you get caught in a rainstorm is more than a little handy. Also they stand on end just fine so don’t take up too much space, and a couple average adults can toss it on, or take it off in ten minutes or less. But I’m genuinely jealous, even though I’m not a jeep guy, this thing looks fantastic.

Mcnudge
Member
Mcnudge
3 months ago

On the subject of the topper, after 30 years of owning pickups, I found the optimal solution for me was a hard tonneau cover and one of these cargo bed sliders. https://cargobed.com/
That particular truck was an F150 FX2 sport that I decided I wanted to keep super clean. Good luck with the Comanche David! Always did have a soft spot for those.

GirchyGirchy
Member
GirchyGirchy
2 months ago
Reply to  Mcnudge

It entirely depends on how you use it. A tonneau cover of any type would be useless for me – I’ll only ever have a topper/camper shell.

JumboG
JumboG
2 months ago
Reply to  GirchyGirchy

I’m the opposite. A topper was nothing but trouble for me. It was frequently in the way of loading things into my truck, and a real pain to remove (took 2 people.) I now have a tonneau cover, takes a couple of minutes for 1 person to fold it back and out of the way.

GirchyGirchy
Member
GirchyGirchy
2 months ago
Reply to  JumboG

That’s…kind of my point. Telling people “oh this is the best solution” is worthless. They each have their pros and cons and use case dictates what works for each person.

Mcnudge
Member
Mcnudge
2 months ago
Reply to  GirchyGirchy

Absolutely true, but the topper thing just turned into a place to hoard things for me! I didn’t have a slider on that truck though.

142
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x