

So the Willys sits on a ford chassis . The cab with the small window puts it 53 or earlier . the front fenders are 50 or newer and the 5 bar grill is 50-55. Bill
Is that a caboose or you're just happy to buy a Willys. Cool pickup.
A friend has a barn with an air conditioned office upstairs. His solution to seal the stairs was to hinge the hatch from the narrow end. When hatch is open, it is parallel to the stairs. He uses a cable and counter weight to make lifting easier.
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love the willeys pick up , lets see inside of the caboose
Andy I think you are supposed to call it investing my kids inheritance. Looks good
Dwight
I guess that's OK, you can just send me money.

Super cool old truck!!!!

Andy, great score on the Willys.
I will go along with Dwight, its an investment in your kids inheritance...![]()

Years ago he told me he didn't want to mess with selling all my junk so I really don't think about outgoing inheritances.Nice old Willy's Andy.

You do well at finding old trucks. You have any that you have seen, that might interest me and my friends from P.R.? He is looking for 1940's to late 1960's, any flavor, but do likes the Ford, Chevy, Dodge, more better.
So who is this truck going too? family member, GJ family member? I have a birthday coming up in November? Just thinking??![]()
Man I need more Saturday's...
The little willys looks cool. With my 2 cents of commentary could you take that tub off the back and make it into a trailer. Then on the back of the jeep make a flat bed so you can get full width of the cab. Would be handy for some hay bales or something that way.
Seems you got 4 different tires and rims on it also.
Cheers GB

Nice Willys. To bad someone messed up the dash with new. Are you going to restore it?




Andy: nice work getting your new Willys on and off your trailer and it looks right at home now. i suppose it was getting close to another Sunday and you needed to buy another truck. I guess it will sit outside or are you going to build another POLE BUILDING for it and the ROTOBIN?
i like the idea of a DRIVESITFAR casting on an all aluminum hammer. speaking of aluminum i just picked up this aluminum pipe wrench and i have a few aluminum tools now. just wondering what ANDY would do to remove the paint and shine something like this up? or do you like shiny tools?
have a great SUNDAY and hope you are ready for another week of SATURDAYS.
cheers.

As long as we are throwing out door ideas, I propose a pocket door slider. It may seem unconventional, but stay with me. Use 2x4s to build a frame that is twice the width of the opening. Build runners on the bottom using wood topped with hdpe for lubrication. Drop in a piece of 1/2 or 3/4 plywood that covers the opening. Put a sheet or two of 3/4 ply on the shelf side of the opening to close the pocket.
Slide the plywood "door" into the pocket when you go up the stairs. The hdpe should help it slide. Now the door is out of the way and you can stack stuff on top of it. When wintertime comes, slide the "door" out of its pocket and button up.
As a safety measure, I would paint red on the top side, just in case. You just never know what will happen in AndyLand.
love the willeys pick up , lets see inside of the caboose
wow what great caboose pics, cant wait to see the insides, I don't have one but love to get one, I do have some stuff that was in a caboose , love train stuff, hell I love all stuff, thanks for posting

Very nice Willys or is it a Willord or a Fillys or a Wilford? I like Wilford and pronounce it Wil ferd.
The caboose it cool too and what a great story about the guy that rode and work on it.
I was telling my wife about how you tell people to come check out your wife's big caboose and she thought that was just wrong.
Happy Saturdays starting in the morning.






That's really cool that the guy who worked on your "way car" came by.
I would want to restore it but what practical use would it be. Actually it is big enough for me to live in and it would make a cool home. If you ever finish some of your other projects it could at least use a little love.
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Andy, thank you for sharing you Caboose with us. I just can not get over it's patina.
Unreal..![]()
Nice photos of the Caboose Andy.

Hi Andy.( Just Andy???) I'm tired this morning.
Your wife does have a big caboose. She should be very proud of it. I wish my wife had a caboose like that. I would enjoy climbing all over it. And to think she doesn't even mind you taking pictures of it and sharing them with us. She must be a real cool lady.
And I'm sure that other wives do have a deeper appreciation for their spouses after a session with you.
Okay, I'm leaving![]()





Holiday today and I'm tearing into the insulator's tractor today. Started taking it apart yesterday and thought to take a picture of a screwdriver I ground out of a broken 3" socket extension. I was working on a friend's Massey a couple of years ago and it had this large flat head screw where you can miss it if you don't know it's there. We couldn't get it loose with my trusty big screwdriver and Crescent wrench so I ground this out and have used it several times since. Works especially well on this particular screw.
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Andy, you are just amazing. Those large drag link sockets cost the earth. When I was working on a vise recently, I had to improvise with flat stock and a pair of vise grips. Some of them have large screws which attach the vise to a swivel base and the huge screw slot can be 2-3 inches long. And after a hundred years of so, they don't move easily. Idea and concept stored away for the next project. Thanks.![]()
So is a holiday a Saturday or Sunday?
I remember when socket sets always came with a drag link socket. I still see them occasionally at garage sales. Though as a kid I didn't know what a drag link was it was still useful.
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Andy, in the salt air environment of Long Island, NY that Willys would be called "rust-free." The guy who sold me my '56 Chevy one dark and rainy night casually mentioned it was a "floor-door" and I didn't understand (it was a 2-door sedan). The next morning, when I removed the front rubber mats I understood. Floor-door means the floor has gone way beyond pin-hole rust.

New one on me. The Willys has had it's floor boards replaced.enjoyed all of your pics, love the caboose,think of all the things it can be used for, like to have one , I collect old buses also are used for all sort of things, thanks for showing your interest and collection

.
I've never seen a drag link socket, I guess. Some old tractors have drag links with a screw in adjustment to tighten up wear of the ball and socket. Is that what you're referring to?

I don't know anything about them. But my first socket set and many I have seen had a screwdriver just like the one you made and it was called a drag link socket. I used them often but not on drag links.
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Here's a picture of an adjustable end on a 39 Farmall M. Remove the cotter key and the plug will screw in. It is shaped to fit the ball on the other end of the plug, then past the ball there is another curved plug and a heavy spring past that. When everything wears you can tighten up the joint.
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I can't remember but it seems old Chevys had something similar on the drag link to the center pivot.
Maybe someone else will chime in.
"Dang! I forgot about the Show Truck! I'll have to look tomorrow.
When I first saw that picture I forgot it was mine, I just thought "Hey, that's a 216!"
Thanks!
Thanks guys for the education. I always learn something on GJ.
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Congrats on the Willys. You might head over www.OldWillysForum.com. Great, helpful folks over there.
Sorry to confuse. If you look close the tie rod end showing in the picture it is a ball and socket joint.
lg
no neat sig line

ANDY: thanks for the tour of your wife's CABOOSE. also the story about the guy that used to work on it when it was in service is a good one.
was the reading room before you joined GJ or do you still make time to read cause between all the stuff you do i can't imagine you have a lot of free time left even though you do have 6 SATURDAYS and a SUNDAY every week.
i'm impressed with your fix of the attic drop down door and almost surprised you didn't have a metal handle somewhere on the property to use.
how's the BULL and your cows doing lately while you are buying and rebuilding old tractors and trucks?
have another great SATURDAY and hope your holiday was restful.



Andy:
Thanks for the caboose tour and for not even trying to push us into the dime coke machine area at the end of the tour. Not too many guys are brave enough to share pics of their wife's caboose on this site.
Did I mention Cokes, only a dime?
My bravery is only exceeded by my foolhardiness and lack of sound judgement.
You said you have owned it since long before the 12/07 destroy date and I would guess it was decommissioned sometime in the early-mid 80's if the last repack date was 8/82. Maybe it was on Pearl Harbor day with no year.
May be, might be record of decommissioning is different given the serial number identifies the unit. However that does not sound railroad-like.
The electrician rewiring a rental house I did the rest of a few years ago had worked for the L&N as a generator mechanic until CSX closed up shop in town. He had a lot of stories to share and figured out he and my helper's dad had worked together. He would probably have sought out the cars he had worked on as well even if his were the diesel locomotives.



