CJ, TJ, or Hybrid?
Arizona Joe
Jeeper
Hello everybody. I hope this is the correct place for this thread.
I used to own a CJ7 . Now I own a 1997 Jeep TJ (Sport, 4.0, 5 speed)-got it in August of '96, brand new, and it has 204,000+ miles on it. The rear Dana 35C is just about shot, and they put in crappy 3.07 gears. Replacing the rear with a Dana 44 is gonna cost 3k+ by the time it's all said and done, and then I have to do a gear change to the front too. I have to get new seats, top, etc.
I am wondering if it's worth it, and considering a few things, and would welcome advice and opinions. I've looked at the new JKs and test driven them-beautiful machines, but, conveniences require sacrificing independance, so I'll pass on the JK.
I love my TJ, but I do miss the simplicity of the CJ. Yes, coil suspension, fuel injection, etc. are wonderful, but when you're deep in the outback and your Jeep won't start, how do you fix it with the diagnostic computer 300 miles away? I say this because something as simple as a $20 relay can leave you stranded without knowing what's wrong. Not to mention the sheer nightmare of the endless wires, connectors, etc. that snake all over the place. In my old CJ you could figure it out and even rig it to get home, which I did a few times. Granted, the TJ has never left me stranded even after fording headlight-deep water with no snorkel and then falling nose-first into a hood-deep mudhole for 1/2 an hour.
Still, I just spent two days pulling the dash out of my TJ to get to the A/C box and it was a living hell (I'm thinking of chopping the dash in half for easier removal). I kept remembering how easy it was to pull the dash out of my CJ and work on it.
SO...
I am considering these options:
1. Build a Jeep on a CJ8 /Scrambler frame sort of like the Brute, but with an apple crate bed, and perhaps an aluminum body cab (pickup style). The engine would be either an inline six or a diesel, carburated (no computers).
2. Stretch my TJ a bit and do the Brute thing and applecrate, and convert to a carburated system without the computer etc.
I want the Jeep to be a daily driver and good for driving across the country, but also capable of handling deep outback expeditions into places like Alaska, and likely towing a small, lightweight off-road teardrop type trailer.
I used to own a CJ7 . Now I own a 1997 Jeep TJ (Sport, 4.0, 5 speed)-got it in August of '96, brand new, and it has 204,000+ miles on it. The rear Dana 35C is just about shot, and they put in crappy 3.07 gears. Replacing the rear with a Dana 44 is gonna cost 3k+ by the time it's all said and done, and then I have to do a gear change to the front too. I have to get new seats, top, etc.
I am wondering if it's worth it, and considering a few things, and would welcome advice and opinions. I've looked at the new JKs and test driven them-beautiful machines, but, conveniences require sacrificing independance, so I'll pass on the JK.
I love my TJ, but I do miss the simplicity of the CJ. Yes, coil suspension, fuel injection, etc. are wonderful, but when you're deep in the outback and your Jeep won't start, how do you fix it with the diagnostic computer 300 miles away? I say this because something as simple as a $20 relay can leave you stranded without knowing what's wrong. Not to mention the sheer nightmare of the endless wires, connectors, etc. that snake all over the place. In my old CJ you could figure it out and even rig it to get home, which I did a few times. Granted, the TJ has never left me stranded even after fording headlight-deep water with no snorkel and then falling nose-first into a hood-deep mudhole for 1/2 an hour.
Still, I just spent two days pulling the dash out of my TJ to get to the A/C box and it was a living hell (I'm thinking of chopping the dash in half for easier removal). I kept remembering how easy it was to pull the dash out of my CJ and work on it.
SO...
I am considering these options:
1. Build a Jeep on a CJ8 /Scrambler frame sort of like the Brute, but with an apple crate bed, and perhaps an aluminum body cab (pickup style). The engine would be either an inline six or a diesel, carburated (no computers).
2. Stretch my TJ a bit and do the Brute thing and applecrate, and convert to a carburated system without the computer etc.
I want the Jeep to be a daily driver and good for driving across the country, but also capable of handling deep outback expeditions into places like Alaska, and likely towing a small, lightweight off-road teardrop type trailer.



