Home » I Just Got Extremely Lucky On My WWII Jeep Build: I Found The Ultimate ‘Reference’ Jeep

I Just Got Extremely Lucky On My WWII Jeep Build: I Found The Ultimate ‘Reference’ Jeep

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It was the night before my flight to Germany to see my family, and I still hadn’t packed. The following day was going to be a rush to the finish line, packing not just my own stuff, but also what I needed for my very first flight with an infant. I was nervous, which is why a shot of dread joined excitement coursing through my veins when I received a notification that someone was selling the perfect WWII “reference” Jeep only 90 minutes from me. I knew this was an opportunity sent from the heavens, and there was no way I could turn it down. But what about my flight?

After realizing the shocking number of World War II Jeep parts one can buy from eBay, I told eBay and they partnered with The Autopian so we could attempt something ambitious: I’m trying to build an entire WWII Jeep using as many parts from eBay as possible. I’ve already purchased an entire body.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Check this thing out:

I also purchased a whole frame. Look at this thing:

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I also bought the entire brake hydraulic system, including brake lines, the primary cylinder, and wheel cylinders. Plus I bought leaf springs, leaf spring shackles, and more:

 

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I haven’t even scratched the surface on all the parts I’ll be ordering from eBay, but I knew that to complete this build in time for the Moab Easter Jeep Safari in early April I’d need some kind of “reference Jeep.” I bought a great book from eBay that details how to build a WWII Jeep, and that will join lots of other literature in helping my build gets close to completion, since this reference Jeep I bought is such a junker. But to try to get this project going at the rate needed to achieve my Moab Easter Jeep Safari deadline, I knew I needed something right there to look at and to pull the occasional small part from.

The goal, of course, is to buy as many parts from eBay as possible, and I already have the big things — the body and frame. I have a brand new engine coming in very soon, too (I cannot wait to show you that). But I know there are some parts that you’re just not likely to find anywhere online. Chief among those parts are axles. I know if I waited long enough, a set would pop up on eBay; here’s a CJ-2A axle, for example:

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Screenshot 2025 10 10 At 10.18.48 am
Image: eBay

But time is of the essence, and nobody makes aftermarket axle housings, largely because the hundreds of thousands of original ones have — unlike the tinworm-prone body and frame — held up quite well. With so many originals around, the need for new, aftermarket ones just hasn’t been there. In fact, it wasn’t long ago that you literally couldn’t give away World War II axles; nobody wanted them!

But I do, because a set of World War II axles — a Dana 25 up front and a Dana 27 in the rear — represents the foundation of my build. Those two stick axles are the first major parts that I bolt to my frame (via leaf springs), creating a rolling chassis that I can dress up with a brake system, steering system, drivetrain, powertrain, and ultimately body.

It was therefore crucial that I find some axles, and soon, because my build couldn’t really begin, in earnest, without them. I was worried because I was heading to Germany for a few precious weeks that I could have otherwise used to build the Jeep. Maybe, just maybe, buying this “reference” Jeep would allow me to enjoy my time in Germany. Having possession of a vehicle — with axles, and with various other small parts that I might have struggled to find online (and crucially, mostly assembled to help me understand what goes where) — would prevent my transatlantic excursion from causing my build to fall behind track.

So I called the Jeep owner, who told me he was in California from Idaho because his father had sadly recently passed away, leaving multiple Jeeps behind. The gentleman was handling the estate, and wasn’t sure what the Willys MB was worth; it was rusty and crusty, and missing a wheel. Someone had apparently offered him $500. I was willing to go significantly higher because, if it was complete, the engine and transmission alone were worth a few grand if they were in decent order.

I was a bit concerned that the Jeep might have been a hodgepodge of random parts, as old flatfender Jeeps tend to be, but while on the phone with the gentleman, I heard someone else chime in. Apparently there was someone with the seller — someone extremely knowledgeable about World War II jeeps. He identified both axles as the Dana models original to the World War II Jeep. The transfer case, too — something that pretty much nobody sells online — was original, he said. He also knew some of the eBay sellers I was buying parts from, like Peter DeBella. The guy knew his stuff, so I was certain this was a mostly original WWII Jeep for sale near me for cheap.

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I had no choice but to get it. And so, the morning of my transatlantic flight, I hit the road at 6AM with… no plan.

I Drove To The Desert, Blindly

Screenshot 2025 10 10 At 10.54.48 am

I had told the seller I’d be at his property by 7:45, meaning I’d have to leave my house at about 6 AM. “I’ll text you my address once I hang up,” he’d told me the prior not. He did not. I texted him to ask for his location, but I received nothing.

Six o’clock came around, and I had a choice to make. Do I head in the general vicinity of El Mirage, near where the guy says he lives? How am I going to even get the Jeep back to my place?

I had no answer. But I did know one thing: I absolutely had to give this a shot. This Reference Jeep was the key to accelerating my Willys Jeep build, and I had been searching for a junky WWII Jeep for many months. Everything I had found up to that point was in terrible shape and at least six hours away.

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So I jumped into my 1989 Chevy K1500, pointed its nose north towards the mountains, and let that 350 cubic-inch V8 roar as anxiety flowed through me. Where was I going? What shape was the Jeep really in? Why was it missing a wheel; could I even roll it? How would I get it home? Will I miss my flight? How much more do I need to pack? Luckily, I felt some comfort in the travel side of things, as my wife is extremely detail-oriented, and she had told me that if I made it back by 1 PM, we’d be fine.

The odds of me pulling this off given that I had no plan were slim, but I caught a break when the seller called me around 8AM apologizing and saying he’d just woken up. “I’m right near your house; I’m ready when you are!” I told him. I eventually arrived at this property in the middle of nowhere in the desert:

Screenshot 2025 10 10 At 11.00.50 am

After the seller opened his gate, I drove in to see an old home in the back and a bunch of Jeeps lined up on the left. There was a CJ, a Ford GPW, and a Willys MB; I wanted the MB.

Screenshot 2025 10 10 At 10.59.55 am

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From a distance, the vehicle I was interested in didn’t look too terrible. The general shape appeared right, and the body panels look roughly the right shape. But when I looked up close it became clear that this thing is a three-wheeled bondo-covered rustbucket:

Screenshot 2025 10 10 At 10.59.10 am

Screenshot 2025 10 10 At 11.07.25 am

On the plus side, it did have an engine and transmission; the entire driveline and powertrain appeared complete.

Screenshot 2025 10 10 At 11.00.11 am

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“I’ll give you $1,500 for it,” I told the seller, “assuming I can figure out how to get this to my house in the next three hours.”

“Sure, but what are you going to do?” he replied. I had my Chevy pickup, but no trailer. And if I drove to U-Haul to pick up a trailer, and then drove to Harbor Freight to grab a come-along hand-winch to somehow limp the rustbucket onto that trailer, I’d run out of time and miss my flight.

Luckily, I caught two huge breaks. First, the seller had a spare wheel, which I zipped right onto that rear axle with the electric impact I had brought. Second, I decided to put in a AAA Roadside Assistance request via their online app and pray. I know technically AAA only does roadside assistance on registered cars, but it was the only option I had.

Thankfully, someone actually showed up.

Admittedly, when the driver arrived, he wasn’t pleased that he had to yank that Jeep up onto the trailer with four flat tires. “This isn’t a registered vehicle; this is not roadside assistance,” he told me, frustrated. “I’m only going to do this one time. Never gain!”

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After I let him know I’d make this worth his while, the driver was super nice, and put the Jeep right up on his flatbed:

Screenshot 2025 10 10 At 11.01.00 am

It was then that another truck blasted past the seller’s fence. “Oh boy,” the seller told me after I handed him the funds. “Those guys are here to buy this Jeep.”

“What Jeep? My Jeep?” I asked. “Yep.”

Luckily, the two gents were also interested in the CJ and Ford GPW Jeep, and they really only wanted the body from my vehicle — something I do not need. We exchanged contact info, and I went on my way, wiping sweat from my brow at the realization that me ending up owning this much-needed Reference/rare-parts Jeep had basically been a miracle.

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Screenshot 2025 10 10 At 11.01.18 am

So many things came together to make it happen. I had to learn about the Jeep while I was still in the country. The seller had to tell me his address, which I didn’t know when I left my house in the morning, within a few hours of me leaving. The seller had to have a spare wheel. The AAA driver had to save my bacon. And the other buyers had to show just 30 minutes too late.

Now my Reference Jeep sits in front of my house, and I feel significantly less nervous about this daunting project. May the 2025 World War II Jeep build begin.

[Ed note: David mentioned the idea of building a brand new WWII Jeep to the team at eBay, and they loved the idea so much they said, “How can we help?” Their financial support and David’s Jeep-obsession are the fuel behind this crazy build. – MH]

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Slant Six
Member
Slant Six
1 month ago

Sort of feels like the old Steven Wright joke…

”I have here George Washington’s axe. I changed the handle and the head, but it occupies the same space.”

[and then that makes me think of… “Do you think when they asked George Washington for his ID, he just pulled out a quarter?”]

M. Park Hunter
Member
M. Park Hunter
1 month ago

I have been a AAA Platinum member for decades for the 100-mile tow perk. It literally saved my marriage.

30 years ago, I had to drive my janky MG-A from Indiana to my fiancé’s home in New Jersey, before we flew to Texas to get married, before we flew to Chicago to pick up my Rambler station wagon, before we drove the Rambler to Wisconsin for our honeymoon and back to New Jersey.

The MG was the weak link. It was already not running right when I left home. By the middle of Ohio it was stumbling on 3 cylinders at anything less than highway speed. When I crossed into Pennsylvania, the speed at which all 4 cylinders went bang had crept up to 75… but so had traffic in the Turnpike.

As night fell I knew my time was limited, since the generator put out less power than the lights drew. My entire goal was to make it up within 100 miles of her house in Matawan. I finally coasted off the highway somewhere around Stroudsburg and called AAA.

The flatbed dropped me and my broken MG-A off at my bride-to-maybe-he’s house in New Jersey at 3am. Three days later she married me anyway.

PlatinumZJ
Member
PlatinumZJ
1 month ago

Truly the Jeep gods have smiled upon you.

Seriously, this is going to be a great build! Looking forward to more updates.

James Colangelo
James Colangelo
1 month ago

This is baffling to me – you’re in a time crunch and are going to pick up a car, and you have zero means to bring it home with you. In addition, you’ve bought a Jeep Comanche that would never be up to any of these tasks to replace your Chevy that is built and meant for it, which you took on this trip.

Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
1 month ago

David, so many things you’ve written in the past couple of years are the adventures of a YES person. You may have been one when you were cocooned in Detroit, but somewhere along the way you really shifted that YES gear harder than Dominic Toretto and we’re all better for it. As much as we joke about the car hoarding and rust and shower spaghetti (and don’t worry, we won’t stop) this red YES thread that runs through your stories ties together a life worth living.

Last edited 1 month ago by Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
Al Cutturini
Al Cutturini
1 month ago

How do you leave to go pick up a non-running vehicle and NOT bring a trailer or tow hitch? And why would the tow driver agree to this, knowing he could lose AAA business if he got caught?

Creative Username
Member
Creative Username
1 month ago

Tune in next week, when David meets his new neighbor, the recently retired Housing and Zoning Inspector from Troy, Michigan.

Tagarito
Member
Tagarito
1 month ago

Will expect nothing less than a Greep Jeep memo

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
1 month ago

Any excuse.

“Honey, why is there a cadaver in the basement?”

“So if we injure ourselves we can figure out a treatment.”

Like seriously, you couldn’t find an old Haynes manual?

Hugh Crawford
Member
Hugh Crawford
1 month ago

Haynes ? You must be kidding when you can get this.

https://archive.org/details/Tm10-1513

Hoonicus
Hoonicus
1 month ago

Breaking News! David gets reference!

Alpscarver
Member
Alpscarver
1 month ago

Propose updating Elise (NHRN) ’s name with ‘Saint’ for letting you do all of this. And well done sir. Looking forward to the next chapter

Dodsworth
Member
Dodsworth
1 month ago

It’s biblically epic the way you keep wandering in the desert looking for answers.

MikeInTheWoods
Member
MikeInTheWoods
1 month ago
Reply to  Dodsworth

And he was able to find the parts in that sea of Jeeps.

Jesse Lee
Jesse Lee
1 month ago

As many project cars as you deal with, honestly it would make sense for you to buy a flatbed trailer or tow dolly.

Tbird
Member
Tbird
1 month ago

Actually… didn’t he already own and then sell the reference Jeep a few months ago?

Jesse Lee
Jesse Lee
1 month ago
Reply to  Tbird

That was a high hood CJ3B, no?

Tbird
Member
Tbird
1 month ago
Reply to  Jesse Lee

Yes. Cream with red wheels IIRC.

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
1 month ago
Reply to  Tbird

He has bought/sold almost as many discontinued model Jeeps as Stellantis did last year.

Brockstar
Member
Brockstar
1 month ago

I am glad to see the Jeep gods rewarding David. It’s nice when good things happen to good people.

sentinelTk
Member
sentinelTk
1 month ago

Understand, David, this agency given you by your I can only assume amazing wife is finite. Use it wisely and sparingly, lest it be lost.

Jb996
Member
Jb996
1 month ago

The story I get here is that your wife is amazing.
And I hope / am sure, that you two find ways to make it up to each other.

“Honey, I need to leave you alone with our young child to finish packing the day of our first international flight with him (to visit MY parents) so that I can drive off to maybe buy another rusty vehicle. And I probably won’t be late?”
“Just be home by 1pm.”

Wonderful.

The Bishop's Brother
Member
The Bishop's Brother
1 month ago
Reply to  Jb996

It is also within the realm of possibility that this is the PART of what she said that he heard and remembered…

Mouse
Member
Mouse
1 month ago
Reply to  Jb996

I’m assuming that her real math was if he were back by 3pm they’d be fine, so she told him 1pm.

Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
1 month ago
Reply to  Mouse

#spousemath

Nick B.
Member
Nick B.
1 month ago
Reply to  Jb996

This is part of why I’m keeping my fianceé forever: she’s that way too. Even if she may not like or agree with something I do, if it’s important to me, she tells me to do it. And I do the same with her. A couple months ago she started a conversation with “I know you don’t like this, but -” and I cut her off and said “But it’s important to you, so do it. I’ll just have to learn to like it” in reference to a tattoo I knew she wanted. She’d mentioned a deal with her preferred artist coming up and I figured that’s what she was about to ask me.

Just like she doesn’t like kei cars and would prefer I never have one, but has told me to get the Alto and Copen I want… though she does actually like the Copen.

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