Rescued Grandfathers Scrapyard 79 CJ Rebuild - Steering/Suspension/Drivetrain
PHFarm
Jeeper
Good morning everyone. Since this is my first post and I am very new to all things jeep please don’t flame me too bad.
I recently rescued a 79 CJ5 from the scrap yard. This was my wife’s grandfathers jeep. About 25 years ago my father in law blew the jeep apart planning on doing a restoration/refresh of the Jeep. Life got in the way and it has sat as a pile of parts since then. A lot of things are really unknown about it as he cannot remember what has and has not been done to it.
I have cleaned most of the frame up and done a budget rebuild on an AMC 304 , T-150 and Dana 20 that were from a doner 75 CJ5 .
I have gone through the front end, Dana 30 , and am planning on doing the rear end, AMC20 , a little later. It has obviously had some suspension work done to it as it has been converted to an SOA and appears to have a high steer on it. It did have some very faded stickers on the high steer kit (SRJ? CRC? CRJ? Somewhere, CA) the leaf springs look to be aftermarket or at least not factory. I’m looking for a little info on the steering/suspension as I’m getting very close to start looking at drive shafts and shocks. Obviously the stacked washers on the heim joints don’t seem correct. I believe they were done in order to clear the leaf springs. However, as I’m adding weight to the front end and they are flattening out the need for the “spacers” appears to be needed less.
The Transmission /transfer crossmember appears to have 1” spacers, I’m assuming to drop the transfer to help with pinion angle. I’m very close to starting to work on the tub and mounting it to the frame. I’m definitely concerned about the pinion angle as it looks pretty extreme and was wondering if anyone knows what the tolerances wound be for that angle. I do plan on using a Tom Woods double carden unit, but if the rear end needs to be moved I’d rather do that now before measuring for driveshafts.
As I said before I am very ignorant when it comes to jeeps. I have a heavy equipment and diesel background. The overall goal was just to save this from going to the scrap yard. The tub, hood, and window frame are in amazing shape with no rot at all. The fenders are both new in boxes as well as a ton of new, 20+ year ago, parts for the rest of the Jeep.
Any info or recommendations would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks, Steven
I recently rescued a 79 CJ5 from the scrap yard. This was my wife’s grandfathers jeep. About 25 years ago my father in law blew the jeep apart planning on doing a restoration/refresh of the Jeep. Life got in the way and it has sat as a pile of parts since then. A lot of things are really unknown about it as he cannot remember what has and has not been done to it.
I have cleaned most of the frame up and done a budget rebuild on an AMC 304 , T-150 and Dana 20 that were from a doner 75 CJ5 .
I have gone through the front end, Dana 30 , and am planning on doing the rear end, AMC20 , a little later. It has obviously had some suspension work done to it as it has been converted to an SOA and appears to have a high steer on it. It did have some very faded stickers on the high steer kit (SRJ? CRC? CRJ? Somewhere, CA) the leaf springs look to be aftermarket or at least not factory. I’m looking for a little info on the steering/suspension as I’m getting very close to start looking at drive shafts and shocks. Obviously the stacked washers on the heim joints don’t seem correct. I believe they were done in order to clear the leaf springs. However, as I’m adding weight to the front end and they are flattening out the need for the “spacers” appears to be needed less.
The Transmission /transfer crossmember appears to have 1” spacers, I’m assuming to drop the transfer to help with pinion angle. I’m very close to starting to work on the tub and mounting it to the frame. I’m definitely concerned about the pinion angle as it looks pretty extreme and was wondering if anyone knows what the tolerances wound be for that angle. I do plan on using a Tom Woods double carden unit, but if the rear end needs to be moved I’d rather do that now before measuring for driveshafts.
As I said before I am very ignorant when it comes to jeeps. I have a heavy equipment and diesel background. The overall goal was just to save this from going to the scrap yard. The tub, hood, and window frame are in amazing shape with no rot at all. The fenders are both new in boxes as well as a ton of new, 20+ year ago, parts for the rest of the Jeep.
Any info or recommendations would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks, Steven






