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  #1  
Old 07-08-23, 05:05
Mike K's Avatar
Mike K Mike K is offline
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Default CJ3A jeep West.Aust

Not a Land Rover but a Right Hand Drive CJ3A jeep.

https://purl.slwa.wa.gov.au/download...b6325971_1.jpg

Notice the side step.
https://purl.slwa.wa.gov.au/download...b6325940_1.jpg
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1940 cab 11 C8
1940 Morris-Commercial PU
1941 Morris-Commercial CS8
1940 Chev. 15cwt GS Van ( Aust.)
1942-45 Jeep salad

Last edited by Mike K; 19-08-23 at 14:40.
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Old 18-08-23, 23:23
Jacques Reed Jacques Reed is offline
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Default CJ2A in family

Hi Mike,

I never knew any RHD CJ2A's were brought to Australia. I remember Jeep produced RHD vehicles in the US for the domestic market. Rural mail delivery postmen needed them to access the roadside mailboxes. Our Postie in the sixties had a RHD Wagoneer from memory.

The first vehicle I ever drove was my dad's 1946 CJ2A at about 14 years of age.
Pictured with my mom, is when it was a bit newer around 1948. I first drove it in 1964. Harvest Tan colour with factory orange wheels with pinstripes. Fancy for a Jeep!

He bought it, a demo model, from the local Jeep dealer in Reading PA around 1947. He told me they used to give demo rides over mounds of earth at the Reading Airport, Spaatz Field. I think the dealership was called Ira Freyer Jeep and they were still in business twenty years ago when I was last in Reading.

He drove Jeeps frequently during the war and loved them. Photo of him is on Goodenough Island New Guinea where he spent 3 years of WW2 in the US
Army Signal Corp.

Looking at the archive photo It has a different windscreen to my dad's. One piece instead of two. A quick search on the net makes it a CJ3A based on that. Oh! to find a RHD CJ2A or CJ3A in Australia in any case.

Cheers,
Attached Images
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File Type: jpg slides_0043.jpg (154.4 KB, 2 views)
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Last edited by Jacques Reed; 18-08-23 at 23:32.
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  #3  
Old 19-08-23, 02:38
rob love rob love is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jacques Reed View Post
Hi Mike,

I remember Jeep produced RHD vehicles in the US for the domestic market.
Jeep in North America was still making right hand drive Jeeps for export right into the 80s. I once ordered a new front carpet for my CJ7 after picking out a number from the old microfiche. Bonus was they sent two in the box by mistake. Downside is that they were for the right hand drive model, and did not match up to my floor.
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Old 19-08-23, 06:18
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Mike K Mike K is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rob love View Post
Jeep in North America was still making right hand drive Jeeps for export right into the 80s. I once ordered a new front carpet for my CJ7 after picking out a number from the old microfiche. Bonus was they sent two in the box by mistake. Downside is that they were for the right hand drive model, and did not match up to my floor.
Yes that would be correct , the export RHD CJ7 ..... back in 1980 my WW2 jeep was on display in the Melbourne Motor show at the Royal Exhibition Building in Melbourne. At the time, Bill Patterson motors were the official Jeep agency in Victoria and they wanted a WW2 jeep for their display at the show. Bill Patterson loaned me a new CJ7 for two weeks ... I remember it had a AMC Rambler 6 cyl. motor in it , think the jeep was a Quadra Trak model. The vehicle over heated easily ... it had a problem. The jeep stand got a 'honourable' mention' award https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/a...rson%20jeep%22

Jeeps assembled here were different to the US models in some respects , during the 1960s, Jeep had a deal with Ford Australia and Australian Jeeps had Ford Falcon engines fitted.

This article is good but is a little vague about the early days . LHD was banned in Victoria in 1948, so you could not register any LHD jeeps beyond that year. The article mentions Don White who worked at Stokoe Motors, Don told me about the Willys MA and Bantam BRC jeeps that he saw running around Melbourne when the U.S. forces first arrived at Port Melbourne, this is a first hand witness account.

https://cj3b.info/World/AustraliaHis...%20in%20Alaska.)
__________________
1940 cab 11 C8
1940 Morris-Commercial PU
1941 Morris-Commercial CS8
1940 Chev. 15cwt GS Van ( Aust.)
1942-45 Jeep salad

Last edited by Mike K; 20-08-23 at 02:33.
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  #5  
Old 19-08-23, 07:21
Mike K's Avatar
Mike K Mike K is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jacques Reed View Post
Hi Mike,

I never knew any RHD CJ2A's were brought to Australia. I remember Jeep produced RHD vehicles in the US for the domestic market. Rural mail delivery postmen needed them to access the roadside mailboxes. Our Postie in the sixties had a RHD Wagoneer from memory.

The first vehicle I ever drove was my dad's 1946 CJ2A at about 14 years of age.
Pictured with my mom, is when it was a bit newer around 1948. I first drove it in 1964. Harvest Tan colour with factory orange wheels with pinstripes. Fancy for a Jeep!

He bought it, a demo model, from the local Jeep dealer in Reading PA around 1947. He told me they used to give demo rides over mounds of earth at the Reading Airport, Spaatz Field. I think the dealership was called Ira Freyer Jeep and they were still in business twenty years ago when I was last in Reading.

He drove Jeeps frequently during the war and loved them. Photo of him is on Goodenough Island New Guinea where he spent 3 years of WW2 in the US
Army Signal Corp.

Looking at the archive photo It has a different windscreen to my dad's. One piece instead of two. A quick search on the net makes it a CJ3A based on that. Oh! to find a RHD CJ2A or CJ3A in Australia in any case.

Cheers,
With all of that family history Jacques, you should be into jeeps ! It is surprising how many early CJ jeeps turn up for sale on the Australian sites.... I've seen a few CJ2As, most of them are LHD. You would find a RHD CJ3A , they do surface now and then. There is a good source of information available on the Willys Australia F/B page.

Yes the original post should read: West. Aust. CJ3A jeep. More info: https://cj3a.info/cj3a/cj2acj3a.html
__________________
1940 cab 11 C8
1940 Morris-Commercial PU
1941 Morris-Commercial CS8
1940 Chev. 15cwt GS Van ( Aust.)
1942-45 Jeep salad

Last edited by Mike K; 20-08-23 at 02:14.
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  #6  
Old 19-08-23, 09:33
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1949 Advert from a South. Aust. dealer. I think some of these early CJ2A and 3A imports were LHD

Jeep truck was available in Australia as early as 1949.

Stokoe Motors were marketing the Station Wagon as early as 1947. Featuring "Right Hand Drive"
Attached Images
File Type: jpg SA.jpg (248.0 KB, 3 views)
File Type: jpg truck.jpg (295.3 KB, 1 views)
File Type: jpg truck-2.jpg (290.0 KB, 0 views)
File Type: jpg wagon.jpg (256.2 KB, 2 views)
__________________
1940 cab 11 C8
1940 Morris-Commercial PU
1941 Morris-Commercial CS8
1940 Chev. 15cwt GS Van ( Aust.)
1942-45 Jeep salad

Last edited by Mike K; 19-08-23 at 14:35.
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  #7  
Old 19-08-23, 17:18
rob love rob love is offline
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With regard to the right hand jeeps in North America for deliverys like the mail, I believe these were under the DJ model as opposed to CJs. The ones I saw were 2 wheel drive
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Old 19-08-23, 23:11
Jacques Reed Jacques Reed is offline
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Default Right hand drive Jeeps- US Postal Service

Yes, they were the DJ model. My Dad was a postman and I remember when the 2WD Jeeps in right hand drive were introduced. Dad never drove them but was issued with a three-wheel scooter, the "Mailster" as they were called when the Post Office decided to mechanize his suburban mail delivery route. Prior to that he had a walking mail route of 5 miles a day he told me. After that they increased the size of the route, and he covered 7 miles a day.

Rural mail delivery postmen supplied their own vehicles as opposed to the suburban delivery route postmen who were issued vehicles. My dad was a workmate of our rural delivery postman and I seem to remember he told me he had a long wait for a "special order" right hand drive Jeep.
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