How old is too olds?

Saddle Tramp

Moderator
I was lucky enough to go to the Mecum Auction on Kissimmee and found this little beauty waiting for the next day's auction.

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An old Wyllis pickup! I've only seen these on Northern Exposure and Mountain Men. It was great to see one in the metal. I did the slow walk around. All the panels looked straight, no rust from what I could see underneath. No bubbles in the paint. The bed was definitely single wall construction, but that metal was thick compared to today's stuff. The interior was every bit as nice with clean instrumentation and reupholstered bench seat. This truck was clean! Right down to the 4 pot in the engine bay.

I walked around again thinking of the usual things: Payload, tow ratings, does it have A/C when a man rolled up in a golf cart.

"That's a nice one." He said, nodding to the truck. "I've got four of them. Two pickups and two Jeeps."

"That's impressive." I replied.

He continued on, "I plan on bidding on that one even though it's not right."

"It isn't?"

"See that grille?" He pointed, "It's the wrong one. That's a late 40's Wyllis and they came with the flat grille, not the pointed."

"Ah."

"The engine's newer too." He continued. "That's the Hurricane in it. Good for 45 miles per hour. The original was only good for 35."

That stopped me hard. Here I was thinking that maybe this could be a future replacement for my current pickup and I fell for the most basic of mistakes. I thought that this 40's pickup would be able to keep up with today's traffic. That it wasn't really any different than a pickup from the 70's or a compact pickup from the early 80's. Boy was I wrong!

"It's got the better brakes though." The man said, breaking my thoughts. "Ten inch drums. The original had six."

"Wow! That could be so bad!" I thought before immediately reminding myself. 45 miles per hour. For that probably ok.

We talked a little more. I found out he called himself, "Mad Max" and that he had worked for Bendix back in the late 40's for $6.00 (I'm guessing per hour.) It was a fun talk about the usual things. I wished him luck on his bidding and moved on to the next pickup I was curious about.

The lesson I learned is to really check into something if I'm going to use as a daily. I may not like all the new tech out there in modern pickups but you can go too far the other way.

Still would've loved to know what that payload was on that Wyllis.
 
Having one to took around in on Sundays would be great but not as DD. Although, when I lived in San Diego, there was shop that dropped these bodies in too of a modern Toyota frame and drivetrain. Great drivability with the old school look.
 
I was lucky enough to go to the Mecum Auction on Kissimmee and found this little beauty waiting for the next day's auction.

View attachment 844

An old Wyllis pickup! I've only seen these on Northern Exposure and Mountain Men. It was great to see one in the metal. I did the slow walk around. All the panels looked straight, no rust from what I could see underneath. No bubbles in the paint. The bed was definitely single wall construction, but that metal was thick compared to today's stuff. The interior was every bit as nice with clean instrumentation and reupholstered bench seat. This truck was clean! Right down to the 4 pot in the engine bay.

I walked around again thinking of the usual things: Payload, tow ratings, does it have A/C when a man rolled up in a golf cart.

"That's a nice one." He said, nodding to the truck. "I've got four of them. Two pickups and two Jeeps."

"That's impressive." I replied.

He continued on, "I plan on bidding on that one even though it's not right."

"It isn't?"

"See that grille?" He pointed, "It's the wrong one. That's a late 40's Wyllis and they came with the flat grille, not the pointed."

"Ah."

"The engine's newer too." He continued. "That's the Hurricane in it. Good for 45 miles per hour. The original was only good for 35."

That stopped me hard. Here I was thinking that maybe this could be a future replacement for my current pickup and I fell for the most basic of mistakes. I thought that this 40's pickup would be able to keep up with today's traffic. That it wasn't really any different than a pickup from the 70's or a compact pickup from the early 80's. Boy was I wrong!

"It's got the better brakes though." The man said, breaking my thoughts. "Ten inch drums. The original had six."

"Wow! That could be so bad!" I thought before immediately reminding myself. 45 miles per hour. For that probably ok.

We talked a little more. I found out he called himself, "Mad Max" and that he had worked for Bendix back in the late 40's for $6.00 (I'm guessing per hour.) It was a fun talk about the usual things. I wished him luck on his bidding and moved on to the next pickup I was curious about.

The lesson I learned is to really check into something if I'm going to use as a daily. I may not like all the new tech out there in modern pickups but you can go too far the other way.

Still would've loved to know what that payload was on that Wyllis.
I've driven Swede to 70 MPH and it is white knuckle experience. I understand the frustration over newer trucks and all the tech you don't need, but many people dismiss the conveince of hopping in, hitting cruise at 75 MPH and only pulling over for gas and bathroom breaks.

It used to be you'd go 50, drive country roads, pull over to check the oil, belts and air pressure. Take a long break and drive for another hour or two. The world has changed.
 
That it is, but it brings up a good question: If the average pickup buyer is late 40's to mid 50's, why are they styling them and putting features in to attract the 20 something crowd? They aren't the ones buying. Bring back CD players and real buttons!
 
Ok. Now that I'm home from work i can dig deeper here.

My friend complained about the fact that you can't get a CD player in either the Bronco or Bronco Sport. He is going to get a "Diskman" style player and mount it on the dash somewhere and run it through the cigarette lighter. My brother replied that he had to special order the CD player for his Subaru Outback Onyx and it took two months for the dealer to get it. So, out of the three, we all want CD payers.

Besides, do you know how hard it is to find a copy of the Northern Exposure soundtrack? :LOL:🫎
 
Ok. Now that I'm home from work i can dig deeper here.

My friend complained about the fact that you can't get a CD player in either the Bronco or Bronco Sport. He is going to get a "Diskman" style player and mount it on the dash somewhere and run it through the cigarette lighter. My brother replied that he had to special order the CD player for his Subaru Outback Onyx and it took two months for the dealer to get it. So, out of the three, we all want CD payers.

Besides, do you know how hard it is to find a copy of the Northern Exposure soundtrack? :LOL:🫎
Change is hard?
 
That it is, but it brings up a good question: If the average pickup buyer is late 40's to mid 50's, why are they styling them and putting features in to attract the 20 something crowd? They aren't the ones buying. Bring back CD players and real buttons!
I’m not sure it’s the 20 crowd that is demanding it. The older folks with money to spend, looking for comfort and conveniences are the ones that come up in my mind.
 
Ok. Now that I'm home from work i can dig deeper here.

My friend complained about the fact that you can't get a CD player in either the Bronco or Bronco Sport. He is going to get a "Diskman" style player and mount it on the dash somewhere and run it through the cigarette lighter. My brother replied that he had to special order the CD player for his Subaru Outback Onyx and it took two months for the dealer to get it. So, out of the three, we all want CD payers.

Besides, do you know how hard it is to find a copy of the Northern Exposure soundtrack? :LOL:🫎
Hahahaha, I use to want CD players in my trucks, but now I ripped those CD’s to my pc and put them on my phone.

I also don’t miss all the skipping on our shitty roads and in the bush 😜
 
Hahahaha, I use to want CD players in my trucks, but now I ripped those CD’s to my pc and put them on my phone.

I also don’t miss all the skipping on our shitty roads and in the bush 😜
I totally agree… I’m over 60 and I ripped my cd’s as well and dump them on a small usb drive and leave that plugged in to my truck… much better than shuffling cd’s for me.
 
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