Home » My New Jeep Comanche Is More Than Just A Machine, But It’s Also Just A Machine

My New Jeep Comanche Is More Than Just A Machine, But It’s Also Just A Machine

Comanche More Than Machine Ts
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“I told my wife when I bought the Jeep Comanche that it was gonna be a ‘rest of my life’ pickup,” Bill, the man who sold me my new 1992 Jeep Comanche, told me. “[Cancer] is the only reason I’m selling it. I didn’t have any intentions of getting rid of it at all. Needed the money to pay for a pickup to get to the cancer chair where I’m sitting right now, getting an infusion.” So on Thursday morning, Bill parted ways with the truck after waiting multiple months for me to fly up from LA, because even though he didn’t know me, he thought I’d give the truck a good home. And that mattered to Bill.

When Bill said goodbye to the Comanche, it became clear to me that it was both more than a machine and also just a machine.

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You see, this wasn’t just some regular pickup truck to Bill; it was his dream pickup — one that he bought from a man named Jim, who also loved the truck.

“He had other pickups. He was a retired sawmill worker and had a small farm,” Bill told me of the older gentleman he’d purchased the truck from about four years ago. “If [Jim] was farming, he was in his farm pickup. If he was fishing or hunting or looking for coyotes to shoot, he was in the Jeep.”

Jim was known in Bill’s small Idaho town for driving the small red pickup at hilariously low speeds, usually on gravel roads. “That truck spent almost its whole life at 35 mph,” Bill joked. “It was his fishing and hunting vehicle, and also a saddle horse, just to drive around and watch the country … Usually had a rifle beside him on the seat and fishing poles in the back.”

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The truck had initially been sold in Lewiston, Idaho, about 55 miles from Bill’s hometown, and after 40,000 miles, Jim purchased it, per the Carfax report. Jim loved it.

“[He talked about it] like you and I talk about it,” Bill said of the now-departed red-truck-cruiser. “It was his favorite. And it was a plain-jane, very capable — if you wanted to drive out in the field or whatever — it would go. It was his baby. He took care of it … real well too.”

 

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Speaking of maintaining the Jeep, that’s what Bill — a heating contractor who sold wood, gas, oil and pellet stoves — always reminded Jim to do. “I sold [Jim] a gas stove and a wood stove over the years. And I knew his kids and son in laws … and yeah, I’ve always known him with this Jeep. That was his signature rig.”

“Take care of this pickup, because I’m gonna own it when you’re done with it,” Bill teased Jim.

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“It was just a clean old rig,” Bill said about why he was drawn to the small red pickup. Bill’s first Jeep was a 1967 CJ-5 with a “Dauntless” V6 and four-speed manual, and his family had a 1974 Jeep Cherokee 401 and later a 1976 Wagoneer 401. So it was in his blood.

Jim replied to Bill’s joke: “I got son in laws and I got grandkids; they all want it. So it’s probably not likely you’re gonna get your hands on it.”

But then, about five years after Bill first started teasing the man about the truck, Bill got a call. “It was right after my first go-around of cancer … 2022. [Jim] just called me one morning out of the blue and said ‘you still want that Jeep?'”

“I said of course I do!”

Bill and Jim made a deal. And for the past four years, Bill has been taking care of the Comanche, leveraging some of the skills he learned from his dad. “My dad was a mechanical genius. He farmed and then he built and sold and designed lots of different farm equipment. That’s the [type of] house I was raised in.”

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“Fixing a complex problem in the simplest of ways,” Bill told me, was his dad’s philosophy, which is why “he was [regularly] talking with farmers all over the country.”

Bill said Jim sold the truck because “He was having health problems, so he was downsizing stuff.” Bill says Jim put his ranch in a family trust, and though he was going to do the same with the truck, he thought twice about it. “A son in law in town was very unhappy. He wanted it … But [Jim] knew I was gonna take care of it. I’ve always drove older rigs and kept them up nice. He knew that about me and I’m sure that’s why he called me.”

Now Bill has to sell his beloved Comanche for similar reasons.  “That’s the only reason I’m selling it. I wouldn’t have sold it,” he told me. “I told my wife when I bought it this was gonna be a rest of my life pickup. Power nothing, with a radio … it’s just old school and that’s what drew me to it.”

In November of 2021, Bill was diagnosed with Follicular Lymphoma, a type of cancer — specifically a non-Hodgkins Lymphoma that starts in the follicle of a lymph node. He told me he thinks his exposure to herbicides in the 1980s contributed to this diagnosis. Though Bill seemed in good spirits the day I bought the truck from him — he and I shared a great conversation about family, life, and God during our test-drive in the Comanche — it was clear by the tears in his eyes just before we parted ways just how much he’s been through. It’s obvious for me to say that this cancer has weighed on him in a way I cannot possibly describe. Even today, during our phone conversation, he was actively having treatment done. He has to make that drive from his home up to a hospital in Spokane very frequently. He described what it was like taking a shower with no hair on his head, no eyebrows, and no eyelashes: “You don’t know how useful those are until you take a shower without them.” It has been a long road already, and though the treatments will continue, even through tears, Bill’s tone was one of hope and especially gratitude for what he’s been blessed with in this life so far.

 

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Bill had waited two months for me to fly to Boise to buy the Jeep, even though he’d received all sorts of offers from other folks interested. “I’m a man of my word, and I want to sell it to someone who will cherish it,” he told me during breakfast on Thursday morning. That afternoon, after Bill and I shook hands, he told me it was “just a machine,” and I pointed his former Comanche south towards my home in LA.

As I listened to that 200,000 mile 4.0-liter straight six hum underhood, and enjoyed the perfect synchros of that Aisin five-speed manual, I was overwhelmed by the realization I mentioned at the top of this article. This truck that I was now bringing into my life and into the lives of my wife and child is clearly more than a machine. The sawmill worker, Jim, saw it as his “baby,” cruising around Idaho at 35 mph, hunting and fishing and keeping the truck in tip-top shape. And Bill himself, after spending five years ogling over the machine before Jim finally sold it to him, had no plans to ever sell it. Nobody talks this way about their washing machines or refrigerators. This Jeep Comanche is special.

Though to Jim, to Bill, and to me, it is clearly more than a machine, in the context of Bill’s cancer treatments, and the complexities that come with it, the Jeep Comanche is just a machine. Relative to the bills he needs to pay, relative to the family he wants to prioritize, relative to his need for a reliable machine to get him to the hospital, this truck is just an object. In the grand scheme of life, it does not matter.

And yet, Bill is likely reading these words, keeping tabs on an old truck that, a few years prior, was so much more than just a machine. Maybe him reading this means it still is.

With my left hand on the steering wheel and my right hand on the shifter in fifth gear, I stared out into the nothingness of northwest Nevada and — hour after hour — pondered that thought.

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Pat Douglas Barron
Pat Douglas Barron
2 months ago

What a beautiful story. Thank you, David

Forrest
Member
Forrest
2 months ago

Very moving story. Be careful, David. This Comanche might cause cancer.

Sofonda Wagons
Member
Sofonda Wagons
2 months ago

I was diagnosed with non Hodgkins lymphoma in 1989.(My first of 4 go rounds with cancer) I agreed to a trial study of a new treatment option called interferon. It saved my life. Yes, I was a guinea pig, but it worked and helped others. The worst part was the nausea. That’s when, despite my religious upbringing, I discovered, advised from my doctor non the less, the joy of a good blunt and bag of nacho cheese dorito’s LOL

Sofonda Wagons
Member
Sofonda Wagons
2 months ago

Poor Bill. I’m a 4 time cancer survivor myself. I so get where he is coming from and pray for his health. You are really lucky David, to have a wife that supports your Jeep habit. Kudo’s to her. You bought a Jeep that wasn’t a total rust trap .I give her credit for that! I hope the Autopian is around long enough to read articles about you and the kiddo working on this Comanche together. Heck, I hope I’m around long enough to read them! I never understood why these little Jeep trucks weren’t amazingly successful. I still blame the climate of pending issues with AMC/CRHYSLER at the time. I was there and remember. These were really good looking little trucks. Thank you for saving one of them. The fact that it has a topper is so over the top. Yup, that was a pun, abet, maybe a bad one. Y’all wouldn’t expect anything less from me ha ha

MikeInTheWoods
Member
MikeInTheWoods
2 months ago

I don’t have much in the way of spending money, heck, the auto-renewal of my Autopian Vinyl membership nearly overdrafted my account. But is there a way I can send you $20 David so you can forward it to Bill? I’ve lost 3/4 of my family to Cancers and it really sucks. So does the expense of treating it here in the USA. The only wealthy nation without public healthcare for all.
I’d like to help a stranger if possible. David let me know if I can chip in to help.

Sofonda Wagons
Member
Sofonda Wagons
2 months ago
Reply to  MikeInTheWoods

What an awesome comment, Mike, you are good people.. I work in medicare, and yes, our health system is a total joke. During this AEP I have to tell folks their co pays just jumped up and sorry, that 4k med is no longer covered. I literally cry myself to sleep some nights after work. For profit healthcare needs to go away! I wish these folks spending the energy on these no kings and other bullshit protest would pull their heads out of their paid protesting asses and do a no corporate or no profit in healthcare protest! That is something I could support. Your heart is in the right place. For profit healthcare needs to be denied it’s claim and just fricking die already. You must be rich, all I can afford is cloth LOL! Your a good person, and thank you for keeping this non AI website going!

MikeInTheWoods
Member
MikeInTheWoods
2 months ago
Reply to  Sofonda Wagons

I’m certainly not rich: I tune up surgical equipment for hospitals. The corporation bills the hospital tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars for me to show up a handful of times per month, and that same corporation pays me slightly above minimum wage to fix the essential instruments that surgeons use inside people. I need to pick up a second job but at nearly 50, am too tired after work to do that. I hurt so much yesterday after being hunched over the polishing wheel for hours that I was useless all evening. I think that we are all in the same boat in this country, so I won’t poke at your comments about the protesters. The very rich and the corporations that lobby politicians need the citizens to fight one another, otherwise we realize that it’s the 1% that are controlling the nation and don’t have our best interests in mind. Many of those protesters absolutely agree with you that we should not have for-profit healthcare. The goal is to have as system “by the people, FOR the people”. Profit was not mentioned in the constitution. Let’s not divide each other over differences. We all have things in common. By the way, wagons are the best! I’ve owned about 9 over the years. One was even manual, diesel and brown. The grail of a wagon.

Slower Louder
Member
Slower Louder
2 months ago
Reply to  MikeInTheWoods

I’m a doc and a protester. You have it right, IMO.

Col Lingus
Col Lingus
2 months ago

Thanks David.
After I lost my wife to lung cancer just over 3 years ago, I debated what to do with the “extra” car we owned. My car that is. Kept it about 3 more months, until the bills from the Drs. and hospital started to roll in. Believe me, insurance does not cover a shit ton of stuff these days…so I sold my car.
And kept her car. I had searched for her car for years, a rather rare find in our area.
After I surprised her with it, she never failed to tell me how much she loved the car, or me each time she drove it.
That is a priceless memory for me now.

My mind is filled with memories of her beautiful, never ending smile, as she would pull into the garage after work, or shopping. I would stand there and guide her into the garage. (she was always afraid of accidentally hitting the back wall)
That would make me laugh every time, but I appreciated her concern just the same.

Every time I drive her car anywhere these days it is both a comfort, (memories) and a bit of a heart break at the same time.

Thanks for a great article DT…

I will never sell her car.

Last edited 2 months ago by Col Lingus
Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
2 months ago
Reply to  Col Lingus

Great story. My girlfriend in high school had the opposite experience with her clueless widower dad: he and his second wife drove away from their wedding reception in a 1987 Cadillac Brougham… that had been my girlfriend’s late mother’s birthday present three years before.

He was a colossal schmuck who stuck his daughter with the crappiest car in a six-car garage, a 1974 New Yorker station wagon that ran when it felt like it. This garage also contained:

– A clean 1987 Buick Elektra wagon, her mom’s former daily driver
– The aforementioned Caddy
– Mom’s Corvair Corsa she drove in college
– Dad’s pride and joy: a goddamn 1968 Corvette Stingray 427 4-speed

All of which just… SAT there.

Dad’s daily? Company truck.

Ass.

Last edited 2 months ago by Joe The Drummer
Sofonda Wagons
Member
Sofonda Wagons
2 months ago
Reply to  Col Lingus

I work in health insurance (I fucking hate it!). I am so, so, sorry to hear about your wife and your loss. That’s ruff. Please forgive me for being mean to you in previous comments on other post here.. I understand now why you come across like you do sometimes. Keep that car forever, buddy. Again, I had no idea what you’ve been through and please forgive me for being mean to you previously in the comment section. I work in health insurance, cry myself to sleep sometimes for doing my shit job and giving the news to a member about the denial for the care they need……For profit healthcare should have never, ever, been allowed. I don’t want to sound like a bad person, but when that CEO for UHC got murdered by a guy mad about his back surgery claim getting denied, I kind of smiled. Does that make me a bad person???/

Doug Lippert
Doug Lippert
2 months ago
Reply to  Col Lingus

Beautiful

Col Lingus
Col Lingus
2 months ago
Reply to  Doug Lippert

Thanks. I was the luckiest guy in the world with that woman.

Potatomafia
Member
Potatomafia
2 months ago

Oh hey, I’m from Lewiston! I swore when I first saw a pic of the MJ that it looked vaguely familiar?

I just lost my dad to non-small cell carcinoma at the end of July. He left his 2001 Ford F-350 to me. I flew up there and drove it back down to where I live in New Mexico. It’s just a truck but it was my dad’s truck, if you know what I mean. I’m going to keep it forever as it has unlimited sentimental value to me.

That was a great story David. I can completely relate.

Damn, who’s cutting onions in here?

Oh and F*CK CANCER

Argentine Utop
Member
Argentine Utop
2 months ago

What a moving story. Thanks, David, for sharing it. I admire your compassion and the serene wisdom that permeates the article.
All the best for Bill, with hopes that he gets better soon.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
2 months ago

Screw cancer and screw the American healthcare system for creating this kind of financial burden.

I had a battle with cancer myself a few years ago. The w126 was where I went to forget about my morality and I spent 3 months off work, spending a few hours a day in the garage, forgetting the reality that laid outside those walls.

Credit to my spouse, she basically shoved me out there cause she knew it’s what I needed to keep my mind straight.

You nailed it in the title. The w126 is for sale now. Not because it needs to go for financial reasons, but I feel like my story with it is done, and it’s time for someone else to write the next chapter of this car’s life.

Col Lingus
Col Lingus
2 months ago

I wish you good luck.
And I hope you are doing better these days.

Even with insurance we paid a shit ton for stuff that was not covered.

Last edited 2 months ago by Col Lingus
TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
2 months ago
Reply to  Col Lingus

Thanks! I’m about 2 years cancer free, but I always get anxious within a month of the followup scan.

Joys of the Canadian Healthcare system is that my only cost was my meds (imatinib) that were paid at 90% from my insurance, so they ended up being $70/month. The rest of my care was 100% covered, other than hospital parking.

Sofonda Wagons
Member
Sofonda Wagons
2 months ago

What, according to all of the bought for politicians in America, your Canadian healthcare sucks! I say that jokingly. Our healthcare in America is beyond awful. Congrats on your remission. Agree that it will stay that way.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
2 months ago
Reply to  Sofonda Wagons

Thank you for the kind words! And yeah, my healthcare experience was efficient. From initial hospitalization (upper GI bleed) to returning home post-op, my entire journey to remission took just under a year.
They just chuck me in a CT every so many months to make sure I’m still all good. Hospital just raised parking to $16/day though.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
2 months ago

*mortality, dammit. I do my best not to forget my morality.

Phuzz
Member
Phuzz
2 months ago

Screw cancer and screw the American healthcare system for creating this kind of financial burden.

I dunno if we’ll ever cure cancer, but the US healthcare system seems to just be intentionally cruel.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
2 months ago

Okay this is the male version of the Hallmark television network. Who among us wouldn’t subscribe to an Autopian tv channel where a jeep owner is suffering from cancer puts his beloved jeep up for sale, it would be better if his siblings had cancer, and the donor DT was a donor match
I do hope the cancer is beaten

Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
2 months ago

Hell, I’m man enough to admit how many times I got misty at the end of “Overhaulin'” right along with Chip Foose.

Slower Louder
Member
Slower Louder
2 months ago

Thank you David. That’s a moving tribute. And I appreciate the comments too.

PieQuest
Member
PieQuest
2 months ago

Sometimes the right people show up at the right time and this time it was you David.
Lucky you and Bill both, he knows that truck went to the right guy.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
2 months ago

When you get home, first thing, hug your wife and son. Be careful when you go to load anything in the back because that Jeep is already hauling a whole lot of love.

Michael Beranek
Member
Michael Beranek
2 months ago

This truck has been loved, that’s for sure. And when buying an old vehicle, that’s exactly what you want.
And traversing the Nevada desert the long way, alone, is a great way to reconnect with yourself. Any lone road trip can do that, and I highly recommend them.
Best to Bill and his family.

Last edited 2 months ago by Michael Beranek
Dodsworth
Member
Dodsworth
2 months ago

Beautiful story. A prayer for Bill. You sure can pick ’em.

74Cruzah
74Cruzah
2 months ago

About a year after my 14 year old brother was diagnosed with cancer he bought a 67 mustang coupe. The Make a Wish foundation did a budget restoration on the car. The work was donated by a wonderful man who had restored a bunch of classics. Unfortunately, my brother passed in 95. My parents gave me the car a few years later. Every mod/upgrade that has been done to the car is in line with what he wanted to do. I’ve had the car for over 20 years. Someday my son will take over guardianship of the car.

sentinelTk
Member
sentinelTk
2 months ago

Thanks for this, David.

sentinelTk
Member
sentinelTk
2 months ago
Reply to  sentinelTk

Related….anything we as a community can do for Bill?

sentinelTk
Member
sentinelTk
2 months ago
Reply to  sentinelTk

Other related thought….David, you have any connections still at Jeep than can run things up the chain and see about getting this man in a Gladiator?

Dave's_Not_Here
Member
Dave's_Not_Here
2 months ago
Reply to  sentinelTk

Was wondering the same thing.

Shop-Teacher
Member
Shop-Teacher
2 months ago

Dang it, how did it get so dusty in here?

Scott Ross
Member
Scott Ross
2 months ago

A friend of mine gave me his high mileage BMW GS. It meant the world to him, unfortunately his body had other plans. He knew it was going to a good home, he knew I would take care of it and treat it like it should be treated. I have no plans to part with it. I have kept all of his decals on the bike. I improved it here and there with new LED lights, and I use different tires, but in the end its still the same bike in my eyes.

Bkp
Member
Bkp
2 months ago

Many thanks David, this nicely expresses why mechanical modes of transport (cars, trucks, motorcycles, etc.) are both more than a machine but also just a machine. Don’t often get choked up reading on websites, but this is one of those times.

F*ck cancer indeed, lost a sister-in-law this summer to cancer.

Bkp
Member
Bkp
2 months ago
Reply to  David Tracy

Thanks David, it hit my wife pretty hard, her sister was only 8 years older, took her to some of her first rock concerts, etc.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
2 months ago
Reply to  Bkp

I lost my sister to non Hodgkin’s lymphoma. She was incredible. She underwent chemo twice, thought it was beat both times but no. I remember giving her away at her wedding, her spouse was worthless, but due to chemo she didn’t have a hair on her body but she looked beautiful because she was so happy.

Last edited 2 months ago by 1978fiatspyderfan
Harvey Park At Traffic Lights
Member
Harvey Park At Traffic Lights
2 months ago

Sorry to hear that. Cancer is awful.

Mr. Canoehead
Member
Mr. Canoehead
2 months ago

I have a Yamaha FJR that I bought from a friend 13 years ago. He had contracted ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease) and had to stop riding. He bought it new and we completed a number of trips together but he found it increasingly hard to handle such a heavy bike.

We lost him a couple of years later and now I see myself as the custodian of Dave’s bike. I don’t ride it that much but I’ll never sell it. Sometimes a machine is a connection.

Rad Barchetta
Member
Rad Barchetta
2 months ago
Reply to  Mr. Canoehead

I have a friend that bought a hopped up Subaru Legacy from his best friend’s widow after that friend passed away. That car was his friend’s pride and joy. Similarly, he’s continued work on it and will never sell it. Sentimental value is priceless.

Data
Data
2 months ago

I think I need a wacky Torch article after this, oof.

Icouldntfindaclevername
Member
Icouldntfindaclevername
2 months ago

What a great personally written write up David!

Mrbrown89
Member
Mrbrown89
2 months ago

F#ck cancer! Thats all I have to say.

Eggsalad
Eggsalad
2 months ago

Who’s chopping onions around here?

Icouldntfindaclevername
Member
Icouldntfindaclevername
2 months ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

every up vote

It's Fine
Member
It's Fine
2 months ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

I was thinking it was just getting dusty in here.

Drive By Commenter
Member
Drive By Commenter
2 months ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

My allergies just acted up.

Yngve
Member
Yngve
2 months ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

Damn wind is kicking up.

WR250R
WR250R
2 months ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

It’s a terrible day for rain

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