You drive one of those jeeps 50 miles into the jungle and find people hand making 1911a1's. A very industrious and resourceful people. What a great video.
@dougcraft77Ай бұрын
Drive one of their jeeps 50 miles into the jungle and find yourself walking home!
@dc1397Ай бұрын
I bet it is only 49 miles.
@chrislovett6120Ай бұрын
It doesn’t hurt that the US has sent some of the most technologically advanced CNC machines available to make 1911’s and other firearms
@dougcraft77Ай бұрын
@@chrislovett6120 Not to the ones they're talking about. These are all handmade pistols (and rifles). Where did you get this information?
@abee3515Ай бұрын
@@chrislovett6120 Both Armscor and SAM build very nice guns. A really fun one is built in Italy by Brixia imported by Chiappa under the Charles Daly brand the field grade and superior are nice guns but the empire grade is built on the same machining of the Valtro. Look at them side by side and they are absolutely identical.
@kenandbarbie-b6cАй бұрын
Yes, the Philippines even makes Jeeps with stainless steel bodies if you want. ISO certified!
@thatasianplayerАй бұрын
ISO Certified! (ACS!) lmao
@ronchappel4812Ай бұрын
I saw a stainless one up close.Pretty cool. I also saw a Tamaraw made in Galvanized sheet (no paint).That body would have been made in the Philippines right? It was the only galvanized vehicle i saw on the whole trip
@Edmac.68Ай бұрын
Even the jeepney have stainless or galvanize body
@account4infoАй бұрын
Where do I find them? I was driving around the Philippines on vacation and the many shiny old school Jeeps caught my attention
@mls515Ай бұрын
@@account4info You probably saw what are called the “owner type jeep” which are made all over in open air workshops. They have the jeep look but not the same components. Think high-end go kart. There’s also a similar industry remanufacturing surplus Japanese kei cars to left-hand drive for use in the Philippines.
@MadM0nkeyАй бұрын
I have a great deal of respect for the Filipinos... hardworking, enterprising and positive people in general. cheers from India !
@CheapCheerfulАй бұрын
Agreed. All the Filipinos I've met here in Australia have a lovely, happy disposition, smart, good people.
@jesonasotes1504Ай бұрын
A lot of India's here there friendly too and nice..
@pacificbrass3385Ай бұрын
Filipinos love Indian people. Indian culture is a big part of the Filipino culture.
@LazadvjknАй бұрын
@@pacificbrass3385not true, they are the loan sharks. The pajeets are rapey and need to stick to Mumbai
@xsystem1Ай бұрын
the word bai we are using here in the Philippines was originated in India with the word bhai (brother)..that's an evidence of long time good relationship between our ancestors..different culture and religion but Indian people are easy to get along with..wonderful people ❤ respect to india 🇮🇳
@k.r.baylor8825Ай бұрын
MD Juan has saved many a vintage Willys MB jeep when the rust worms have been too active over the decades. They have parts for an 80-year old vehicle that no one else has. I'm glad they are still in business--it's a fabulous company.
@i-am-your-conscienceАй бұрын
I hope they will be in future too. The government tries to ban Jeepneys now or at least only allow those who can have modern security and environment standards. Jeepneys are a part of filipino history, even cultural heritage I might say, and yet they try to remove them
@chrise-ih4ixАй бұрын
@@i-am-your-conscience also trying to ban everything that is not an ev, right? What became of that?
@Vsm426Ай бұрын
@@i-am-your-conscience the jeepney passenger one's not the jeepney for private use
@Skeletors_ClosetАй бұрын
That’s wild. I would think they would be very useful in the jungles. Govt always messes everything up!
@y.__.y--Ай бұрын
@@i-am-your-conscience And what's wrong with modern, safer, environmentally-compliant jeeps? You prefer poorly-maintained, uncomfortable, pieces of multicolored eyesores that spews black smoke at the slightest press of the throttle? For what, history? Heritage? GTFO here with that crap. It's already 2024. Move forward or get left behind.
@geneallevato5809Ай бұрын
Filipinos are wonderful workers. I had my first encounter hiring these people to work in our manufacturing plant in the early 80's up in Canada and I can you from first hand knowledge that they were eager to learn, always on time, respectful, cared about their work and never complained about anything. I just wish they would wear safety glasses.
@tenavrisen9279Ай бұрын
Lmao 🤣 🤣 🤣
@free2roam674Ай бұрын
I live in the Philippines now and as a former Canadian Family Doc I can tell you that Filipinos are not big on any sort of safety gear, starting with the fact that they will ride a motorcycle 4 or 5 up with shorts, t-shirts and slippers. Unfortunately they have incredibly high MVA fatality rates, but they are very fatalistic about life in general. They are lovely and kind people and I love living here. It beats cold and unfriendly Calgary every day.
@myassizitchyАй бұрын
Wussy. Stop worrying about PPE and hire Americans to build American stuff. That's js taking away jobs our real Americans need
@xsystem1Ай бұрын
great read thanks
@Rose.Of.HizakiАй бұрын
@@free2roam674 Filipinos: _"Here for a good time, not a long time"_
@Baebon6259Ай бұрын
This is the Jeep that I want. Not the BS that they called "Jeep" in the US.
@Green-aiderАй бұрын
A car is what you make of it you’re the one who decides how the car works so if you want a jeep like that, quit whining and go buy one or make one yourself
@hamburgerhamburgerv2Ай бұрын
Then why did you buy any Jeep made after 1950
@tuckt6180Ай бұрын
@@hamburgerhamburgerv2HAVEN'T!
@tuckt6180Ай бұрын
@@eugeniopitpitan9463 Neat to have for a farm or local driving in a rural setting
@dartmoordaveАй бұрын
But the US end have to comply with all the regs, and the trinkets you want.
@JPriz4162 ай бұрын
The dentist really had a great Idea. I love those old jeeps.
@MelodyMan69Ай бұрын
0:01 The US Army left behind so many Jeeps after WW2 in the Philippines that everybody fixed then up and used them. I visited around 1974 and every Taxi was a "Jeepney" - extended Jeep. All colours including the headlights. Green, Blue and even Purple. Diesel Engines were very reliable. 🇦🇺
@The_Conspiracy_AnalystАй бұрын
Still are. Many have toyota diesel engines
@norm7312Ай бұрын
Lol we still use jeepneys until now even though they're outdated we have nothing better to replace them with
@zerog2000Ай бұрын
Philippine “jeeps” are literally Ships of Theseus
@joeysumulong8872Ай бұрын
they use surplus engine and suspension from light truck from japan. the phil gov is modernising and will phase out old jeepbeys soon
@Mito_chon_dria13 күн бұрын
That is what they did in afganistan 😅. Leaving gifts for the people
@oscare.quiros6349Ай бұрын
A brand new hand-made vintage Jeep. Cool! 😊
@Easy-EightАй бұрын
Love to own one.
@shawnoandrewАй бұрын
I'd love to be able to import one.....
@langowski007Ай бұрын
Maybe you can buy a schematic and weld and tap it in your yard 🎉
@gregfeneis609Ай бұрын
Pretty much how they were made originally
@SazzbinnSmutzАй бұрын
@@oscare.quiros6349 A jeep that you can't drive.
@Ned-r4tАй бұрын
I'll never forget Subic Bay and the Jeepneys! Best time of my life loved Subic, The Philippines and her people!
@patrickbass3542Ай бұрын
Olongapo City...and all the bars and whores!!!!
@daniellovett4687Ай бұрын
Hey Shipmate - USS ENTERPRISE -- 4 westpacs
@dustybunny6716Ай бұрын
I remember you could fit 20 people in one, and 30 people on the outside.
@larrykelly3536Ай бұрын
@@daniellovett4687 Indy vet here.
@sailorpete13627 күн бұрын
Subic has been cleaned up a lot in recent years, makes a real difference.
@jiggsborah70412 ай бұрын
Now that's a vehicle I would buy right now. I'm sick of the rubbish they make now.
@rondg2Ай бұрын
buy a jimny
@vadim6385Ай бұрын
@@rondg2 or a Mahindra
@hummerskickassАй бұрын
@@rondg2 not everyone is an Aussie
@hamburgerhamburgerv2Ай бұрын
Have a car made after 1950? Then you’re a hypocrite.
@jiggsborah7041Ай бұрын
@@hamburgerhamburgerv2 ..why do I want to argue with you. Have you been a mechanic for 45 years???
@brianphillips1864Ай бұрын
Once again the people of the Phillipines turn the tools of old conflict into a means to feed their families. Very heartwarming, God bless the Pinoys.
@kevin3434343434Ай бұрын
I love how hands on and rough around the edges the replacement pieces are. I feel it adds to the authenticity!
@fattony310Ай бұрын
Jeeps were the am-47 of vehicle simple to make simple to maintain modern jeeps lost that tradition they are high tech boxes that are pieces of crap
@hamburgerhamburgerv2Ай бұрын
@@fattony310Because y’all bought the newer stuff, idiot
@JR-o7dАй бұрын
The WW2 factory made Jeeps would rate a shonkiness rating of 1% compared to the 100% of rating of how those bodies are made, no way would the allied invasion have succeeded if the originals were made in conditions anything like that. It shows ISO 9000 certification for what it truly is and I say that having implemented it in several factories. Shame they havn't invested in more efficient production processes like even the manufacturers of the packing crates have, even during the industrial revolution workers were not on their hands and knees welding unjigged unaligned assemblies plonked on an uneven floor.
@CalvinHikesАй бұрын
Well, I don't like it, but i'm glad somebody else noticed it. The video went from precision parts to... guys just hammering edges.
@MrBill42mb16 күн бұрын
I bought a body tub from them about 20 ago. It was ok, but not great. Needed a lot of work and fine tuning to get it to fit the frame, and to get the original fenders and hood, seat frames etc. to fit.@@CalvinHikes
@MK0272Ай бұрын
Imagine if they could sell entire Jeep kits, mechanical components and all, packaged like they were in WW2. You basically get a shipping crate and a couple of guys could assemble it in an hour or two with basic hand tools.
@outinthesticks1035Ай бұрын
I think you can buy everything, but the assembled jeeps cannot be imported, and if you build one from parts it cannot be plated
@tomhermens7698Ай бұрын
I want one !!!
@tomhermens7698Ай бұрын
@outinthesticks1035 why not ?
@outinthesticks1035Ай бұрын
@@tomhermens7698 it's a variety of reasons. Basically it comes down to , they will not pass safety and pollution laws and damlier/Chrysler hold the USA patents
@strangeperson700Ай бұрын
I saw a KZbin video of an Arabian guy who has one in the crate they came in on display in his living room or something.
@glenrich-uu9zrАй бұрын
Willys Jeep always in the hearts of Americans.
@ky.gambler5281Ай бұрын
As a child I remember many farmers using these old jeeps on their farms in Kentucky, that was 70 years ago. Yes I'm old..
@roncampbell6377Ай бұрын
💞
@Im4evergrateful70Ай бұрын
I’ve got a 1946 cj3-a farm jeep.
@dennism7813Ай бұрын
Thank God for these people. We are losing so much from our past. It's reassuring to know that someone is working to keep our past alive in the shape of the willies Jeep. It was wonderful to watch.
@Edu-hx9szАй бұрын
Nice! I love Philippines and love the original Jeep! Well done!
@gaius_enceladusАй бұрын
Great video! NZer here - I work with a number of Filipino people - great people! I wish someone would make a modern version of the old Series II and III Landrovers! I love the old Landrovers - their looks and their ruggedness. They're *great* fun to drive too!
@Frank7748124Ай бұрын
And the Land Rovers were inspired by the Jeep too.
@willlewis9194Ай бұрын
@@Frank7748124 hey Frank, I could be wrong but I thought it was the other way round??
@willlewis9194Ай бұрын
@@Frank7748124 yes you are correct! you learn something every day! The World War II military Jeep -- the forerunner of today's Wrangler -- spawned the Land Rover in 1948 and, in the early 1950s, Toyota's BJ and FJ, which morphed into the Land Cruiser.
@frosty3693Ай бұрын
Modern vehicle laws would prevent import. But in the US if the vehicle is twenty years old or older the import restricions do not apply So if people had time to wait they could build a new Jeep or Land Rover store it for twenty years and then import it. It is done with bourbon and other liquors, so why not. The drive trains would be another matter to make though.
@briancarton1804Ай бұрын
@@frosty3693A company in India called Mahindra makes complete copies of the Willy's Jeep using a Peugeot Diesel engine. You could probably pick up a twenty year old Mahindra in India in very good condition and import it to the USA or import one with a good engine and box and re shell the vehicle using a Philipino shell.
@nicholas_scottАй бұрын
I think people don't realize that after WW2, countries around the world made copies of the Jeep. Some illegal knockoffs, but lots of countries like the Philippines, India, and Brazil made licensed official copies. Mahindra in India still makes licensed copies of the older style jeeps. They import them to the US, but they are not street legal, so sold as off-road only vehicles. MD Juan is the primary suppiier of bodies of these older jeeps. Its terrific to have that resource
@brownhat1290Ай бұрын
Saw a guy welding while not wearing protective goggles or other safety equipment. Still, one must admire the resilience and strong work ethic of the Filipinos.
@gregbacbac755Ай бұрын
Try to check also how Pakistan workers doing Ike these,lack of self protective equipments and yet they can assemble the disassembled.
@bigjohnson7415Ай бұрын
And he probably only makes $12 a day!🤣
@doopboop8359Ай бұрын
Safety squints
@warrensmith8161Ай бұрын
I live in the Philippines and the guy that does our welding lost an eye while working for another foreigner a couple of years ago. He wears safety glasses now, but still no mask.
@kaliko70Ай бұрын
@@bigjohnson7415 But dinner only costs him US$1.72.
@steffb9229Ай бұрын
As a fabricator of 30 years❤❤ it's excellent to see somebody still doing it right! Even if it's not in America!
@Deminimis2Ай бұрын
I used to drive jeeps in the Army. They were fun to drive and I wouldn’t mind having one today.
@joffrey-k9gАй бұрын
I worked on the M151 A2C version. Hook up a 1/4 ton trailer and there's no place that puppy wont go.
@juand.pomaresbances7688Ай бұрын
@@joffrey-k9g Alguien que tenga el contacto
@tbm3fan913Ай бұрын
I have to visit this place next time I am in the Philippines. Been there 4 dozen times since 1990 and recall visiting a Jeep like factory back in 1994. Maybe write a story up for an auto blog where I am an author if permitted on the grounds. Of course my wife could be of immense help being a Filipina. I gather this is Quezon City.
@juand.pomaresbances7688Ай бұрын
Si pudieran proporcionar los contactos. Mucho agradeceré
@DOI_ARTSАй бұрын
OTJ culture will never die in the Philippines, we had one before
@anxiousdogАй бұрын
What you saw in the video are for restorations of the original GP commonly called jeep (Bantam, Willy's & Ford), the OTJs you're refering to are most likely isuzu - not real GPs, none of the 3 brands.
@DOI_ARTSАй бұрын
@@anxiousdog I said OTJ, engines doesn't matter its the design of the Willys that was copied while making the vehicles. It varies on every maker but the universal design is that of the MB38
@cw7422Ай бұрын
I was in the US Navy and was stationed in Subic Bay. I found the Filipino people to be kind, generous and industrious.
@napadaanlng69Ай бұрын
they should also sell a fully assembled jeep very useful in philippine provincial setting
@Ghost12561Ай бұрын
Nobody is going to buy it, Filipinos want the newer, lighter more gasoline efficient car made from Japan. This is just pasad2x and everyone is doing that in the Philippines.
@Ad-skipАй бұрын
They'd have to build an engine and electrical component too, which is a much more complex process
@Ghost12561Ай бұрын
@@Ad-skip they do not, we don't build engine in the Philippines
@Ad-skipАй бұрын
@@Ghost12561 I think there's a misunderstanding here. That's exactly a point I'm making. They don't make the engine and electronics, which would be a lot more complex.
@MikeBaxterABCАй бұрын
@@Ad-skip They have started casting the Willys L134 Engine blocks now, more preside but otherwise exactly like the original!
@theduke6951Ай бұрын
I remember when i was a kid and we were playing in one of our neighbor's house. They have this groundfloor garage and there's a Willy's jeep with all those accesories (shovel,pick ax, gas container etc) and there's a US Army logo on the top of the hood. It was one of the reasons why i am now so amazed by WW2 stuffs and dreaming that 1 day i could start collecting items from WW2.... anything that has a connection with that history.
@icare71512 ай бұрын
Great video. Wish they would bring back a low cost modern technology original Jeep.
@craigmylo47322 ай бұрын
EPA and NIHTSA wouldn’t allow that unless their cronies are getting rich
@markcollins26662 ай бұрын
Mitsubishi makes a great one, under license from Jeep, I presume. KIA makes a modern tech 1 1/4 ton vintage US Army truck as well. But as @craigmylo4732 pointed out, the powers that be won't allow you to register one in the US, because there's nothing in it for them. From an ex Army mechanic, living in the Philippines. Go to Vietnam or Thailand, and there are used car lots chock full of Jeeps. But can you ship one home? Yeah, sure! But you won't be allowed to register it anywhere.
@ridethecurve552 ай бұрын
Believe me. You wouldn't want it for long. The original JEEPS weren't designed to last more than 9 - 12 months, at best. Their 'cheapness' was a feature, not a bug.
@markcollins2666Ай бұрын
@@ridethecurve55,Yeah, but that's under combat conditions. A big difference between that, and routine maintenance, much less the TLC of a collector. As an Army mechanic, during the '90's I drove a 2 1/2 ton truck, whose paperwork traced it back to Korea during the war. And carried an M16A1E3, an experimental model built in the '60's. I laugh when taxpayers howl over the millions of dollars of vehicles and weapons abandoned in Iraq and Afghanistan. You're welcome, and good luck with finding spare parts. The evidence of the specimens still with us is ample proof, that we can still have nice things.
@jehoiakimelidoronila5450Ай бұрын
Yeah, I agree. Tlc means a very big difference in life expectancy of pretty much everything
@F14Tomcatlover-o2vАй бұрын
Preserving history, culture and creating jobs. The first time that I went to the Philippines, I saw the jeepneys buses. I fell in love with the creation. I refused fancy rides. Jeepney was the way I traveled. The people, the artwork on the vehicles were fantastic.
@emptycl0ud9Ай бұрын
For everyone wondering what the paintless galvanized/ stainless jeeps in the philippines is called, theyre called "owner jeeps". Jeepneys are the public transportation vehicles while owner jeeps are the ones you see with tricked out engines open tops.
@Kupehh8Ай бұрын
jeepmeys only really exist in Luzon. Cebu doesn't have them anymore its all multicabs
@jaykyu6749Ай бұрын
I learned to drive a 3-speed stick, with dual, in one of the original Willys. I remember the side and corner handle bars, towing accesssory, rifle rack, MG floor bolts, spare tire and fuel tin brackets. No radio and no drinks holder.😃 This vehicle is in a class of its own.
@rumannkoch4864Ай бұрын
Don't forget floor drain plugs and fold down windshield
@DhalinАй бұрын
And if the thing ever broke down, you had plenty of room to work on the engine and you could probably do the repairs with a $50 ratchet and socket set with maybe a few wrenches and screwdrivers on the side.
@colonelfustercluck486Ай бұрын
You have to remember that the average soldier had to walk and carry everything, everywhere. During WW2, if you got to drive a jeep, you were lucky. At the start of WW2 in Europe, horses were still used, with more vehicles coming available as war production improved. The Americans had their jeeps, the Germans their 'kubel wagons'....
@billotto602Ай бұрын
The Philippines are one nation I'm extremely proud of. Considering where they were in 1945, talk about coming a long way ! God bless them all ! 🙏❤️🙏❤️🙏❤️ 🫡 🇵🇭 🇺🇸
@cambodiajeepАй бұрын
Great video and we love to see that they still produce parts for vintage jeeps
@alevans512 ай бұрын
Very real and excellent craftsmanship at that factory.
@ridethecurve552 ай бұрын
Really? You've never worked in a domestic auto plant. These 'artisans' are of the 'beat it to fit, paint it to match' variety, to be sure. No signs of mass assembly, even! LOL
@destroythewicked..3836Ай бұрын
Shut the fuck up.. mind your own shit business@@ridethecurve55
@liamobrien9451Ай бұрын
@@ridethecurve55 small company making a niche sheet metal product, honestly a lot of their practices aren't that different from what my workshop looks like, and we're one of the main lift manufacturers in London. Lots of hand fitting and tacking with mig. The one thing I'll say is that they don't seem to have a modern press brake, which is wild because they aren't even that expensive
@PineappleOnPizza69Ай бұрын
@@ridethecurve55bro why are you jealous of them brown people?
@dorianfulton7168Ай бұрын
Tighting bolts with a crescent wrench?! I can't believe the very primitive fixturing and material presentation to the workers. No knock on the products, it's just portrayed as insanely labor intensive. I would love one of those puppies.
@thatsmrharley2u2Ай бұрын
a WELDED cresent wrench so it won't move. Look again.
@markthomas207Ай бұрын
Not much concern for the eyes and skin of the guys doing the welding?
@johnunsicker7440Ай бұрын
A body kit is like $3,500 and frame is $1,800. USD
@chtrvraАй бұрын
And everyone wonders why they are present in every corner of the globe.. skilled, educated workforce
@markharris7120Ай бұрын
The original jeep has also morphed into the jeepney, a major form of public transport in cities and the rural areas. For tall foreigners it can be difficult to look out the windows. The major feature of the jeepney is the often stunning artwork that adorns both the outside and inside and the veritable festoon of lights decorating the front. Learning the jeepney routes and identifying where they are going can be a challenge, but well worth it.
@chrisweeks6973Ай бұрын
That's the main reason why they're painted different colours; specific colours usually relate to a specific route. The old busses in Malta were also colour coded for the same reason. But yes, the jeepney has great character! 👍
@pinoypooltv2 ай бұрын
Wow! I didn't know we have a jeep assembly plant here in the Philippines
@markcollins2666Ай бұрын
That's nothing. There's dozens of them in Manila alone. It's why jeepneys are still around, after 86 years. You can buy a totally reconditioned jeepney for $13,000 USD, and for options, the sky's the limit.
@pinoypooltvАй бұрын
@@markcollins2666 I mean the willys jeepneys
@markcollins2666Ай бұрын
@@pinoypooltv, most of the original body parts are Willys, nothing else will work. Of course, the original drive trains are long gone, replaced by Isuzu 1.8 and 2.2 liter diesel forklift engines. If you want original drive train and other components, Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia is the place to go, the problem is, there's an unprofitable tariff on shipping auto parts. Otherwise, plenty of people would be doing it.
@Ghost12561Ай бұрын
You shouldn't call it an assembly plant, sa atin we coined it Pasad (welding at martilyo) but actually this is a low-end technology and not good for economy of scale. There are so many of them in Manila alone pero di lumalago kasi di sila naiinvest sa Research and Development, they are sort of stuck sa pasad pasad lang.
@OrlyArutaАй бұрын
@@markcollins2666wrong it's not about the passenger jeepney.its about the iconic jeep use by US soldiers in world war 2.i think you don't have idea what you are responding to.para ka lang TANGA...😂😂
@anthoneyking6572Ай бұрын
Wow I Never Knew They Still Make Willys Jeep Great Vlog Thank You
@scottsbaitsandtackleАй бұрын
We were still using them in the Marines in 1978. I joined the Army in 1985 and was stationed in Germany. We were still using them until about a year and a half after I got there. Around 87 we started getting the Hummers and other vehicle's like Bronco's and pick ups
@jasatotakouzeno4674Ай бұрын
Filipino here. I didn’t realize we had a company like this. Sure we have local manufacturers for our Jeepneys used for public transport, but having a dedicated company for restoring WWII era Jeeps is very surprising. The skills needed to manufacture and assemble one are almost the same, so such a specialize company is bound to crop up one day. The History Nerd in me also loves this too
@ApatLangАй бұрын
it's because their customer base is mainly in the US so nobody knows about it
@glennlewis835Ай бұрын
That's great! I wish I could get one. That's what we need, a reliable Jeep without all the bells and whistles. I know someone who has an original '43 Willys Jeep, it still runs and is used on mountain trails, hunting in West Virginia.
@darmawansediono8371Ай бұрын
That is good idea , good job. Respect from Indonesia 😅🙏👍🇮🇩.......
@lunhil12Ай бұрын
There's a guy here in my NY town that has an old Jeep all kitted out in vintage military style. I'd bet he got some parts from this factory.
@daviddiengdoh3500Ай бұрын
Great job,salute to the producers,👍👌 Philippines ,keep it on , thankyou yo u are rhe protectors of these great general purpose vehicles GP /Jeep,4/4 ,(champion of any terrains ,ravines,deserts,go anywhere Vehicles. Thankyou once again,
@mybraintalksАй бұрын
whoaa.. .Philippines do produce their own vehicle?? totally respect to my Filipinos brothers and sisters..As a Malaysian ,this is the first time i hear MD JUAN..i wish MD JUAN can export this jeep to Malaysia. we love this nippy and legendary small jeep. Does MD JUAN Produce or just doing restoration?.
@colonelfustercluck486Ай бұрын
Jeep body parts only..... no engines, gearboxes, electrical or instruments. It's for restoring an old jeep with missing/rusted body panels.
@naveedahad955320 күн бұрын
Amazing worksmanshiop,keeping alive these lagendary and timeless classic jeeps ,which are still loved across the world.💕😍👌👌👌👌
@crebbsjdАй бұрын
This is so awesome!! All my Grandpa's serviced in WWII, and they drove and rode in Jeeps just like those. Your shop is epic.
@coffeeisgood102Ай бұрын
Each of those people in the video are true craftsmen in their trade. My hat is off to all of them.
@johnwillison6483Ай бұрын
I would love to have a couple of these jeeps!! I learned how to drive a manual transmission when i got to my first duty station in CA in 1985 using one of these jeeps!!
@johnunsicker7440Ай бұрын
C&C equipment sells them . Body part, kit, frames.
@mRahman92Ай бұрын
As someone who grew up in the USA, this is bittersweet. Sweet to see them do this, bitter to see the lack of adequate eye protection. Especially for the guy spraying the paint!
@colonelfustercluck486Ай бұрын
it's cheaper to have him lacking the eye protection in the Philippines, than you doing the same in the USA.
@spaceviking4966Ай бұрын
Got nothing but love for the Philippines!!
@puravida5683Ай бұрын
Would love to buy one of these restored jeeps! Had one with the military police in Vietnam. In 4 wheel drive, didn't even get stuck in rice paddies, and got me away from VC fire a couple of times.
@RedWolf777SGАй бұрын
Nothing beats the reliability of a Jeep. These cars were built to last.
@retired_USAFАй бұрын
First tour of duty was at a radar site in northern Philippines. I found the people friendly, poor, but extremely talented. In Bagio they have silver crafting and wood carving schools that produce the most beautiful items. The band in our service club played anything exactly like the record. It was a great year spent with friends.
@speeddemon9555Ай бұрын
Jeeps are all over the Philippines, local transport, called Jeepnies ( a lengthened version ) are abundant and are the main source of getting around, you can hop on or off basically anywhere, and the cost is very cheap just a few pesos and away you go, the Philippines is a fascinating and wonderful country to visit with the friendliest people on earth. i married a Filipina 38 years ago and have never regretted doing so.
@busterdee8228Ай бұрын
I want one. When my dad was still living, he talked about servicing originals in WW2. I wanted to restore one with him, but it never happened. He was a 4th Marine Division Motor T mechanic.
@mikegomintong8856Ай бұрын
I like the Jeepneys here in the Philippines. But they are about to be phase out in Metro Manila, replace with new modernized Mini Beep Buses, and the Jeepneys will be used only in the provincial areas....
@charliebrown4799Ай бұрын
Filipino's culture and work ethic are amazing
@pumpotheclownАй бұрын
Still better than anything FCA Jeep could ever make nowadays, total respect!
@rerite2Ай бұрын
That factory is a thing of beauty. Much respect.
@sunriseboy4837Ай бұрын
The reason the Phillipinos are so good at fixing, and making stuff, is because they are not full of arrogance. They are a personable people, and don't think in a straight line. Mind you, I will say they are really dragging the chain about Smokey Mountain!
@OperationEndGameАй бұрын
Now they need to reproduce the engines and transmissions..
@chrishultgren777Ай бұрын
those L head engines work on 60 octane gas, not modern 87 octane fuel.
@francislililles8360Ай бұрын
100% reproduction is not gonna work since any new vehicles needs to be EURO4 compliant so they need to source new engines that can fit inside the chassis.
@frigidtsunamiАй бұрын
Would be nice to be original. But now a days they use modern surplus engines and transmissions usually from Japan.
@mharris5047Ай бұрын
@@chrishultgren777 People still drive old engines manufactured for lower octane gasoline today even though the gas that they were meant to burn no longer exists. I haven't heard of any problems from the higher octane, they do require a lead substitute be added to each tank of gas but that is to replace the lead which lubricated parts of the engine, not because of octane levels.
@harmonizedigital.Ай бұрын
Philippinos are great people. Loved my visit to Cebu and Manilla.
@singgihagung8318Ай бұрын
Bentuk Jeep Willys simple dan ikonik membuatnya tak lekang oleh waktu. Jadi masih banyak peminatnya
@andywolanАй бұрын
I had wondered why there are many vintage jeeps in such excellent condition. Now I know why. This is awesome!
@DhalinАй бұрын
Rust-Proof Sheet Metal. As someone who lives in the North where they salt to roads to get rid of snow, who has seen the sad death of more than a couple cars due to rust, it would be really nice if our automakers would learn this trick that has been around for quite awhile.
@thetruthseeker5549Ай бұрын
As an owner of a WC-52, I especially enjoyed the images of the Dodge WW2 3/4 tons!! Enough snark. Cool video and a great product. Been hearing a lot about these guy's work.
@wacojones8062Ай бұрын
I have ridden in one privately owned M38 in Montana back in 1973 and have driven one while in the Army reserves along with various versions of the M151 series, Hummers and various versions of the M113 APC family. Big Question who will start making the engines, transmission and drive trains along with the suspensions systems to make new M38 Jeeps.
@greyriddance64Ай бұрын
Absolutely amazing. High skilled professionals and a non automated production system. Almost a handmade product. Fantastic!
@javig5045Ай бұрын
Thank you to the people of the Philippines for providing this rare product so that we may conserve our cool little jeeps...Javi G.
@mdam1977Ай бұрын
Classic case study of why US manufacturers are not competitive, they produce jeeps that have gizmos but not the strength and durability for which Jeeps were first created. While these hardworking people keep to the basics and provide a long lasting product
@allanegleston49312 ай бұрын
wish this company would start making whole jeeps as well. if i could drive id buy one. pronto.
@tonyfalcon80412 ай бұрын
Yes they do build full with extra cost🤪 those on crates have complete parts ready to be assembled
@123andmeАй бұрын
It may get stuck trying into the US due to safety standards.
@gabrielsturdevant9700Ай бұрын
@@123andme it gets stuck because jeep sues the shit out of anyone making a willys clone, happened to mahindra a few years ago
@drewdane40Ай бұрын
@@gabrielsturdevant9700 Chrysler even sued AM General for having a vertical slat grille on the H1 Hummer. They're extremely letigious.
@michaelmika2995Ай бұрын
LOVE THOSE JEEPS. GREAT VIDEO!!!
@drivestoworkАй бұрын
Fun fact: They're still using many of the Jeeps the Americans left behind! "Converted" into Jeepney taxis!!
@Ryan_ChristopherАй бұрын
Nope, wrong, sorry. All those old Jeeps are dead and gone. All the new jeepneys run on imitation chassis powered by second-hand Japanese engines. No WW2 jeep would last 60 years, let alone 80.
@samipso24 күн бұрын
Lovely to see small scale manufacturing in an age where everything must be fast and cheap.
@Chris-eh7mu16 күн бұрын
Amen!
@RobertMarshall-d2nАй бұрын
the company should provide a complete kit in a box of these jeeps including the engine and transmission so the kit could be shipped to other countries and built on site with everything in the box needed to provide a drive away vehicle once assembled.
@gospelaccordingtojohn8959Ай бұрын
I learned to drive a stick shift in a 1942 Willys. My grandfather bought it after the War and my nephew sold it to collector 4 years ago. My family own it for 75 years.
@KinteemАй бұрын
7:50 brother isn’t even using safety squints 😂
@borets-s-rasizmom25 күн бұрын
@DIOSpeedDemon2 күн бұрын
I live in a small town in the middle of nowhere. I saw one of these jeeps riding down the road with one happy senior citizen driving it. I high fived him for classic ride.
@suzannePhillips-k1m2 ай бұрын
very interesting glad to see how made.
@tambarskelfirАй бұрын
It is wonderful to see classic Jeeps get a second life with brand new parts. This is truly environmentally friendly. Reuse. And besides, the Jeeps look so cool!
@adrianTNTАй бұрын
1:12 ... 5 years from now: "How the Talibans are still able to produce Humvee H1 parts" 😅
@scotttyson797012 күн бұрын
Thanks Biden
@majorwhite51Ай бұрын
Absolutely fantastic folks, great to see so much hands on work😊
@williamd71612 ай бұрын
I wonder if they're the manufacturer of MD Jeepstar back in the 90's?
@GorillaCookiesАй бұрын
Yes
@TheRealestHiАй бұрын
Thank you! Keeping these classics alive is a great thing!
@gfabie4901Ай бұрын
Those are hand-built beauties!
@michaelbolton2741Ай бұрын
Incredible work. **This** is the Jeep I'd love to have.
@TESTA-CCАй бұрын
This is really cool, they would sell really well in the UK and California.
@ElementofKindnessАй бұрын
LOLOL. California has so many restrictions, you'd never be able to to have one there!
@joelpierce3940Ай бұрын
You kidding? California doesn’t want ICE vehicles.
@joelpierce3940Ай бұрын
@@ElementofKindnessYes, Comifornia.
@Mark_135Ай бұрын
Nice jeeps. Small practical daily vehicle that gets you to where you want to go. Glad to know they have a manufacturing plant in the PH. Nice video. Liked & Subscribed. God bless the Philippines.
@billotto602Ай бұрын
If I was 20 - 30 years youn 11:05 ger, I'd buy one of these in a heartbeat ! I wonder what the shipping costs are ?
@LarsonFamilyFarm-LLCАй бұрын
Pretty cool process...great workers making a great product.
@maxalvarado895111 күн бұрын
We had one of these in the 70s and after years of service my dad change the engine due to the rising cost of gasoline. I was 15 when I was allowed to drive it from farm to town. It was exciting to drive through mud and water while the four wheel drive was engaged. It was one of my " times of your life" episode!
@Orc-icideАй бұрын
2:00 no way, this company invented a laser beam that cuts metal? Wow, that's revolutionary.. Seriously.. a gantry cnc... That's amazing... 2d is the cutting edge
@HervooАй бұрын
So advanced, so amazing, so future
@lt.petemaverickmitchell71139 күн бұрын
Keeping the legend alive….OUTSTANDING!
@mrweisuАй бұрын
Very primitive process! The way Jeeps should be built.
@leecornelius3458Ай бұрын
You don’t think this is really the way that the parts were made originally, do you? Those pieces would’ve been precision stamped on an assembly line, not hand bent with holes randomly placed by the workers with drills.
@jjkool48Ай бұрын
Philippine people are extremely resourceful. I worked with many here in Canada and ended up marrying a Filipina. Even the women find a way when it seems there isn't. Love these people!
@Niftynorm12 ай бұрын
Good idea but they need some eye protection, all that welding must leave some serious flash burns on their eyes.
@eloibosco6989Ай бұрын
Parabéns!!! PARABÉNS. BRILHANTE IDEIA DE RESSURREIÇÃO DESTE MITO .TRAGAM PARA O BRASIL!!😊😊😊😊