'80 CJ5 vs '66 Military Jeep
TDHofstetter
Prefers carburetors & points
- Posts
- 1,003
- Thanks
- 4
- Location
- Bradford, Vermont
- Vehicle(s)
- '73 CJ5 232/T14/D20/D30/D44,
'74 CJ5 Renegade 304/T15/D20/D30/D44,
'85 CJ7 258/T5/D300/D30/AMC20,
(Not CJ: '68 M715 230/T98/NP200/D60/D70)
Really or sarcastically? lol I can never tell on the Internet.
Thanks for the tip. I was wondering what a fair offer would be. I think they are willing to come down, but there's also another potential buyer that I could be bidding against.
By the way, what is the best way to determine if the chrome hides rust? Or is there a way? If I crawl under and look at the back side, would I be able to see signs of it?
Really - it's prettier than a Jeep Jeep has a right to be, all dressed up & shiny like that, no dust... hasn't got quite as much shiny stuff as my CJ7 , but that's how it was when I bought it... and my '7's pretty dirty now.

I'd offer... I think... $4750 to start, with as much of that being countable cash money, folding money, talking money, as possible... and then only if they can produce a valid title (if that's possible where you live). Vermont won't issue a title for any vehicle older than - I think - 14 years.
That chrome, by the bye, isn't chrome - it's polished aluminum. Behind it, you can rest assured, will be SOME rust... and if it ain't there now, it will be. Those armor plates wick moisture in & don't let it go (capillary effect), and if you seal 'em with silicone you seal moisture inside, too. Besides which you can't seal it ALL EVERYWHERE PERFECTLY.
That said, I bought some armor identical to that for one of my '5's because it's got a couple issues that're not worth dealing with otherwise - some wiseacre tried towing it by hooking through the gas filler hole, like that. Not me - before me. It's just easier to add armor than to make that damage look right again.
Get on your hands & knees, get on your back, feel up inside the rear wheelwells. Feel the inside of the fenders all through that area. You're feeling for anything other than flat, smooth, painted steel. While you're there, look closely at the rear spring shackle mounts and the rear of the frame where they mount. That's a classic spot that collects water, salt, sand, mud... and rusts like crazy. Crawl a little further and pick out each of the rubber body mounts - they should all look pretty much alike. That's another common rustpocket. Look inside the rear of each of the front fenders, where mud & sand & salt are sprayed up by the rolling or spinning wheel. Feel there - feel for rust bubbles or anything other than smooth, painted steel. If it sells for that sorta' money, bigods, it BETTER be DANGED GOOD.