My timeline for completing my eBay WWII Jeep project means I have no choice but to get the entire drivetrain and braking system done now; this means I’m wrenching through the night tonight in an all-out offensive attack on rusty bolts, greasy bearings, and stubborn press fits. To ensure that I complete this ambitious list of tasks, I’m risking embarrassment by telling all of you everything I plan to get done before the night is done, and to make it fun: I’m going to give a prize to whoever guesses what time tonight I complete all this work.
We’re trying something new today: a LIVE wrenching-blog. This is partly to make it more fun for you, dear reader, and also to really help motivate me beyond my normal level of motivation. I have a ton of work to do, and if I have to check in hourly to give an update, I’m a lot less likely to dilly-dally. I’ve got to get stuff done.
Speaking of things I have to get done, my goal is to get the drivetrain and the brakes done today. This way, all I have to do is get the engine running and, theoretically, I can try to drive this thing. Here’s the list of tasks I plan to complete before I go to sleep — it’s an ambitious one, and I give myself a 50% chance of pulling it off before midnight
- Rebuild all drum brakes
- Remove and replace all 8 outer wheel bearings
- Remove and replace all 4 inner axle seals
- Remove and replace rear pinion seal
- Install all new brake lines
- Install all new brake hoses
- Remove and replace all kingpin bearings (check drag with pull-scale and shim appropriately)
- Remove and replace all kingpin seals as well as any wheel bearing seals
- Install rear driveshaft [UPDATE: okay, the front one.]
With this done, I should be able to stop, I should be able to steer (ish; I still have more to rebuild before I’m done, but I can use old parts in the interim), and I should be able to go if my engine runs and my transmission/transfer case rebuild turns out to have been done properly.
I know this live-blog skips a bit ahead of our latest wrenching update — which mentioned how Laurence and I had ended up in a bit of a bind when I cracked a piston. This was just after we’d rebuild the transfer case and bolted it to the rebuilt transmission. As you’ll see in these live blogs, things are a bit farther along, and I’ll come back and discuss where things stand in a future update. But I wanted to do this live-blog and issue a challenge:
Whoever can guess, within 10 minutes, when I complete the above list of tasks, will receive a prize. I don’t know exactly what the prize is, but maybe I’ll ask you about what cars you like, and maybe I’ll choose a price to best suit your tastes.
[Editor’s Note: Actually, we do know the prize! Whoever guesses the closest gets 50% off a membership or an upgrade if they’re an existing member, and what the hey, I’ll do a drawing of a car, just for you! How’s that sound? – JT]
I’ll be doing this mostly alone, with a tiny bit of help from our Video Manager, Griffin Riley (I’m going to have him pack all my bearings). I don’t plan to take any breaks aside from meals, which I’ll eat on the premises. I have all the parts I need, but there’s a chance I’ll realize halfway through that I’m missing something. I’ll do my best to wrangle something together.
Otherwise, I’m just tearing apart some old axles and rebuilding their outer bits, along with their seals. Plus I’m installing brake lines and hoses and a rear driveshaft. Sounds doable, right? [wipes brow]. I’ll take any encouragement in the comments!

UPDATE 1

Doing rear pinion seal.

UPDATE 2:
David has informed me he installed the front driveshaft, not the rear. That still counts. And he’s wisely getting a shop to put the U-joints on the rear driveshaft! – JT
UPDATE 3:
Brakes!


UPDATE 4:
I’m really, really tired. I’m gonna spend 20 minutes (from 6:25 to 6:45) charging my phone and eating. Then I’m going to replace the rear axle inner seals. The old ones popped out easily with a pry bar. The new ones will hopefully not give me too much trouble, as I purchased a special installation tool like this one.
Once the inner seals are in, I’ll pop the carrier back on, install the diff cover, and then do the rear brakes. The rear axle will then be done. Then I’ll move on to the front brakes and kingpins.
Brake lines will come after that. They’re actually not going to be particularly challenging, since they’re pre-bent and there really isn’t that much line to deal with. But fatigue is setting in early, so we’ll see what I can get done tonight before I pass out.
The goal remains to grind it out, but safety first.
UPDATE 5:

Here’s me adding RTV to those pinion yoke splines after installing a new seal. Those splines are a classic spot for oil to try to wick up and out onto the floor. Not on my watch!
UPDATE 6:

Looking good.
Update 7:


Here’s me banging a U-joint into a driveshaft only to realize:

It’s actually my front driveshaft. The rear on the WWII Jeep is shorter, which is quite uncommon.

Anyway, this just means I’m installing the front driveshaft today, and not the rear. That’s OK (my rear driveshaft is bent and needs a professional repair; I’m on it).
Update 8:




I started tearing down the front knuckle. Everything looks good. The thing has these super weird “Tracta” CV Joints. They’re basically these two big, strange cast iron shapes that connect the inner and outer axle shaft and provide constant-velocity action. For some reason it seems the U.S. Government specified constant velocity joints over U-joints on the WWII Jeep.


Update 9:


I took my rear differential carrier out, and for the first time I used this special inner bearing seal tool. With this project, time is of the essence, so I’m trying to work smarter. Normally I’d bang these seals in from the outside using a humongous extension and a bearing seal driver set, but I’m so glad I bought that tool you see above. Check this out!:

I did avoid a major mistake that the previous owner made. If you look really closely, you’ll see an upside down seven on the left side of the differential housing, and you’ll also see a faint upside down seven stamped into the left bearing cap.
These bearing caps are line-bored, meaning you can’t mix up left and right caps, and you don’t want them upside down. The number (and there’s a sideways seven on the right side not shown) are there to help you get this right. As I took a photo before I took this apart, I noticed the last person in this diff had switched the caps up!

Update 10:

With new inner seals in, I popped the carrier back into place and sealed up that rear differential. Then I started working on the brakes. They’re incredibly basic!

This was about 2AM. To get to the other side of the car to finish its brakes and put the whole rear axle behind me, I had to use a puller to get the drum off, and this would require some strategic hammering, which at 2AM was not going to fly.
I also had to hammer out some bearing races for my wheel bearings. With little left in the tank, I turned in for the night, with much of my task-list still incomplete, but with confidence I’ll get it done the next day.
Update 11:
Let’s take advantage of having all these parts exposed to learn about CV and universal joints! And somehow, this Jeep has the weirdest one! There’s no ball bearings!
UPDATE 12:
I’m rebuilding the other rear brake and I’m replacing all the wheel bearings that are in the drums.
As you can see one of these drums is not in particularly amazing shape, but I’m gonna run it cause it’s will be at least safe if not, you know, the best performing drum of all time.



UPDATE 13:
I’m basically going to finish up the rear brakes/wheel bearings, and install the axle shafts (which were missing from this axle, and which I will remove from a spare axle). Then I’ll fill up the diff with 85W-140, install the hard lines on the back, and be done with the rear. Then it’s time for the front kingpins and inner axle seals, etc.
I’m tired. My baby would not go to sleep last night. He sleeps with my wife and me in bed; as tricky as that can be for my sleep (and especially my wife’s), I really do love him being right there beside me.
It’s hard when I get inside and he wants me to hold him. My hands and face and hair are covered in grease, so I have to decline, and he just cries. Alas; duty calls!
UPDATE 14:
UPDATE 15:

Cutting out rusty bolts that refuse to move!
The bolts are the adjuster bolts in the drum brake backing plate. I’ll get ’em out.
Top graphic image: David Tracy









Where is David Tracy?
Where is content from David?
Is he OK? Did he finish the Jeep?
Let’s have a contest “Find David Tracy, win a prize”.
OK, so this took me forever.
The last update (15) was: “Cutting out rusty bolts that refuse to move!
The bolts are the adjuster bolts in the drum brake backing plate. I’ll get ’em out.”
So are you done yet???
Did anybody win the prize?
If you’re still at it, you gotta move this back to the top of your page and pin it for the weekend since it’s probably the only active content you put up but it’s buried halfway down page 2.
Still Working???
So much for ’12 Hour Challenge’
Looks like closer to 48. Maybe it’s time to let people re-vote. 🙂
I see the insta embed which doesn’t show a timestamp. So who won?
I’m still in the trenches. Getting my butt kicked by rusty old drums, brake cams that won’t spin in the shoes, backing plate bolts I need to cut off, etc etc
In other words, your happy place.
In update 10 it appears that the picture of completed brake assembly is of the driver’s side rear. If that is indeed the case then the shoes are on backwards. The shorter shoe is the leading shoe which needs to be to front for the self energizing aspect to function when driving forward. As installed the braking function at that wheel will be poor. If you look at the old shoes in update 12 which seems to be the passenger side they are on correctly, with the leading shoe on the front and the trailing shoe on the rear.
On the WW2 Jeep, the long shoe leads.
Interesting, haven’t seen that before.
It is definitely weird.
I did put my inner axle seals in backwards, though. D’oh!
Ouch!
“Please follow along our Instagram stories for the latest!”
So I went to Insta-brag and here’s what it told me…
“See this post
Sign up or login to see theautopian’s post.”
It’s just like Farce-book. They won’t let you see stuff unless you’re a member of their little club.
“Sign up or Log in to Continue watching
More photos, videos, and ways to connect with theautopian.”
So I don’t get to see how this turns out???
No no, we’re posting here too!
Thanks for clarifying.
Now get back to that Jeep™!
I think David is learning what happens to your body and motivation after having kids :)!
That’s why I put my foot down and demanded that my wife carry and deliver the children, so my body actually stayed the same.
And yet I’m still fat and lazy. Weird 🙂
Some things never change lol
Feb 26th, 11:46 PST
Uh, seeing this the next day and.. is David OK?
Hopefully, David isn’t trying to bench press a Jeep…
David’s fine. You should see the other guy, though.
A question that cries out for contextualization, because the answer is almost assuredly “no,” while at the same time also “much better than he once was.”
In this article we’ve got the David who once turned his yard in Detroit into a Superfund site demonstrating consideration of his neighbors. As far as I can tell, no rust was harmed during these operations, and proper tools were actually in use. So definitely ok-er than the David that once was.
Ha, all good points but I apparently missed the final paragraph so thought the blog just ended abruptly!
Somewhere early morning in an LA driveway
there’s a guy starting to realize
that eternal fate
has turned it’s back on him.
It’s 6am….
It’s 6 am (it’s 6 am)
The gear is gone (the gear is gone)
I’m sitting here wrenching (sitting here wrenching)
The grease’s still warm (the grease’s still warm)
Maybe my impact (wrench)
Is tired of shaking bolts off
Yeah, there’s a socket on the loose
Loc-tite in my head
Wrapped up in fan belts
Brake circuits are dead
Cannot decode
My whole life spins into a frenzy
(2 times)
Help I’m steppin’ into the AutoZone
Place is a madhouse
Feels like being boned
My brake pads’ been moved
Under lube and tarp
Where am I to go now that I ain’t got too far
(2 times)
Soon You will come to know
When the billet hits the bone
(Apologies to Golden Earring)
Solid Gold(en Earring). Outstanding work!
Golf clap? Golf clap.
*golf clap*
Sounds like someone’s trying for another COTD appearance. 🙂
I just hope David gets the reference. Being Dutch, I believe Golden Earring was popular in Europe, so he may have actually heard this song in his younger years spent in Germany.
It took me two reads of the first stanza to catch the reference.
This is pure artistry (I’d go for the Gold(en) comment, but DrunkenWrench beat me to it)
What happened to our updates? Did the Jeep explode? Were they raptured? Did they just order pizza and pass out in a carb coma? NO ONE KNOWS!
No clue, but I just did the updates myself!
Solid progress!
If you need backup, I HIGHLY recommend overnighting an SWG from the east coast.
I’d come down and help, but I may get held up in Customs.
No updates…fearing for the worst: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EBay_stalking_scandal
Has to be done by Monday. Won’t anyone think of Trade-in-Tuesday!
The day after tomorrow at 10pm. 🙂
4:09 AM PST. I’m way late reading this so I assume someone else has guessed this time.
I’m going to say…..3:53am PST?? Hope you are hanging in there David! You’re making such great wrenching progress on your eBay Jeep in the past day!!! Good luck and thanks for keeping us readers updated!
3:27am PST
Good luck!!
2:00am pst