Willys M38A1 explained

Willys / Kaiser MD / M38A1
Manufacturer:Willys (1952–1953)
Willys Motors / Kaiser Jeep (1953–1971)
NEKAF (1955–1962)
Sherkat-Sahami (Iran)
Aka:Willys MD
Production:1952–1971
Body Style:2-door SUV
Layout:Front-engine, four-wheel-drive
Engine:134cuin Hurricane I4 (gasoline)
Transmission:3-speed Borg-Warner T-90 manual
Wheelbase:812NaN2 [1]
Length:138.62NaN2
Width:60.82NaN2 (body) [2]
Height:732NaN2 with top up, reducible to NaN2NaN2
Weight:2660lb
Predecessor:Willys M38
Successor:Ford M151
Sp:us

The Willys MD, formally the M38A1 Truck, Utility: 1/4 ton, 4x4, or the G758 by its U.S. Army Standard Nomenclature supply catalog designation, was a four-wheel drive, military light utility vehicle, made by Willys and Willys Motors / Kaiser Jeep from 1952 to 1971. It was widely procured by the U.S. military from 1952 until 1957, after which U.S. purchases were reduced to the U.S. Marine Corps. The Marine version had minor differences from the units used by other branches.

The MD was the first Willys jeep with a significantly restyled body, immediately recognizable by its rounded hood and fenders. It formed the basis for the civilian and commercial Jeep CJ5, built for three decades (1954–1983), and subsequent models, and called the first 'round-fendered' Jeep. Although hard doors were still not available, the soft-top could be complemented with soft side panels and little hinged doors, that consisted of a thin steel frame with cloth and plastic window.[3]

For the U.S. Army, the MD was replaced by the Ford M151 jeep, from 1960. Low volume production of M38A1s for export to friendly foreign governments continued through 1971. Production totalled 101,488 units (80,290 domestic / 21,198 foreign sales). M38A1 jeeps saw extensive service during the Korean War, Vietnam War and several other conflicts.

Description

The M38A1 / MD was the second post-war evolution of the World War II Willys MB jeep (after the M38 or MC; F engine Prototypes), and the first Willys Jeep to feature the new rounded fenders and hood body design that would become the distinguishing body style of the 1955 CJ5, and which was carried through for decades on the CJ6, CJ7 and CJ8 Jeeps.[2]
The M38A1's wheelbase grew by a single inch (2.5cm), and overall length by some 60NaN0.

Drive train

The M38A1 was the first Army jeep to use the Willys Hurricane F-Head 134 inline-four engine. This engine was taller than the 'Go-Devil' engine that powered the WWII era jeeps and the M38, and was the reason for restyling the body over the higher power plant.

Otherwise, the MD had a T-90 3-speed transmission, Dana 18 transfer case, either the Dana 25 or the Dana 27 front axle, and Dana 44 rear axle.

Variants

M38A1 (MD)

Basic utility version. Would regularly be equipped with M2 .50 cal machine gun and/or radio equipment and antenna-mount. On early units (1952–1953) the front grille was mounted with two 45 degree hinges, one at each frame rail, to flip it forward for maintenance.[4]

M38A1C

Modified version equipped with a M40A1 106 mm recoilless rifle. They were fitted with a .50 caliber M8C semi-automatic spotting rifle. The spotting would be fired first, to ensure a first round hit with the 106mm recoilless rifle.[5] The .50 caliber spotter cartridge was 22mm shorter than the standard .50 caliber machine gun cartridge. A slot was provided in the windshield frame for the 106mm barrel when traveling.

M38A1'D'

Several dozen M38A1s were converted, mounting a tactical nuclear Davy Crockett Weapon System, fired by a large diameter smoothbore recoilless rifle – either an M28 120 mm, or an M29 155 mm gun.[6] The vehicle carried two M388 projectiles, mounting the Mk-54 nuclear warhead. The range of weapon was approximately 1.25 miles (2 km), with the M28 gun, or 2.5 miles (4 km) with the M29. This vehicle/weapon combination was also referred to as the "Battle Group Atomic Delivery System", and was allocated to airborne units.

M38A1 Welding Unit

Just one unit is assumed to have been built,[7] originally fitted with a Harger & Valentine field arc-welding system, powered by a power take-off driven generator.[8]

M170 ambulance

The M170 Frontline Ambulance variant of the M38A1, with a 20inches stretched wheelbase, formed the basis for the later civilian Willys CJ6 Jeep. The spare tire was relocated in a special wheel well on the right interior side of the vehicle, and a larger 20gal fuel tank was fitted. Capacity was six seated passengers, or three lying on litters. A total of 4,155 M170 ambulances were designed and built by Kaiser Jeep of Toledo, Ohio, from the mid-1950s to the early 1960s.[9]

U.S. Marines

There is no official, nor uniform specification, for the M38A1s that where manufactured specifically for the United States Marine Corps. USMC jeeps had to be air transportable, hung under a helicopter, so they all had a reinforced rear bumper, for lift ring fitment, and most indeed had front and rear lift rings.[10] The rear lift rings were fitted (by or for USMC) in a different position, than standard jeeps had been prepared for from the factory.
Further, most USMC jeeps had more waterproofing, and roughly two thirds of them received more undercoating – to the frame exterior, under the floor and hood, and the bottom half of the firewall. For better traction, the Marine Corps started ordering limited-slip differentials, especially on the rear axle, and mostly after introduction of the M151 jeeps in the Army. USMC jeeps were painted 34052 forest green, with flat yellow numbering on the hood only. Little or no other markings were applied on USMC jeeps.[10]

Canadian

Canadian variants: M38A1CDN, M38A1CDN2 produced in Canada and M38A1CDN3 produced in the USA.

According to Canadian author David Dunlop, over 1,000 M38A1 CDN jeeps were built by Ford of Canada in 1952/1953.[11]
Next, Kaiser Jeep of Canada Ltd started assembling Jeeps in Windsor in 1954 or in 1959, in the former Willys factory, established there in 1934. Initially building only CJ-5 jeeps, at a targeted rate of 1,000 a year, in 1967 a Canadian government contract came, to build 800 M38A1 CDN2 Jeeps for the Canadian Forces at $2,789,000 CDN.[11] M38A1 CDN3 jeeps were built in the USA for Canada in 1970-1971. Unclear about 1959-69 Windsor production is how many other Jeep models and units were built for the Canadian military. Anecdotal evidence has surfaced of a domestic Canadian Navy unit, built in 1964.

Dutch: NEKAF jeeps

After initially using surplus U.S. war jeeps after World War II, a successor model was required by the Royal Netherlands Army, from the early 1950s. Wanting to support Dutch industry, a prototype four-wheel drive design by the country's only volume car and truck manufacturer DAF, the H-driven DAF YA-054, was considered, competing with U.S.-built M38A1s, a number of which had been supplied under the Mutual Defense Assistance program.[12]

The DAF proposal seemed neither better nor cheaper and lost the race, but as an economic stimulus, the American Jeeps were to be assembled in Holland[13] from knock-down kits parts, made in the U.S.A., in the "Netherlands Kaiser-Frazer" (NEKAF) factory. Eventually some 24 % of the NEKAF jeep's parts were supplied by Dutch firms. Nekaf jeeps were identical to U.S. M38A1s, except for minor lighting additions.Production spanned from 1955 to 1958, under Kaiser-Frazer (some 5,650 units), after which time production was taken over by a Dutch company, who delivered another 2,237 jeeps through 1963, still using the 'NEKAF' name, for a total of just under 8,000 units. The M38A1 Jeep eventually served with one of the longest service records in the Royal Dutch military, for more than 40 years, from 1952 until 1996, as a result of both budget constraints, and sheer longevity of the vehicles, even outlasting the DKW Mungas, which had been bought to replace them in Dutch service,[12] as well as some 1,200 DAF YA 66s supplied in the 1970s, which had little to no off-road capability, and which were decommissioned in the early 1990s.

After 1959, with American part sets, 355 Nekafs were converted to M38A1C: 106mm M40 recoilless rifle carriers, and from 1983 to 1989, forty M38A1Cs were equipped with cable-guided TOW missiles.[12]

Iranian

Jeep Truck copies (variously called the Simurg or Simoorgh) are produced by the firm of Sherkat-Sahami in Iran.

Operators

M38A1 MD and M38A1C versions used by the Bangladesh Army.[14]

CJ-5 and Brazilian-produced versions used by the Brazilian Army.

M38A1 MD, M38A1Cdn, M38A1Cdn2 and M38A1Cdn3 Canadian-produced versions used by the Canadian Army.

M38A1 MD version used by the Cuban Army during the Cuban Revolution.

M38A1 MD and CJ-5 versions used by the Croatian National Guard during the Croatian War of Independence (19911995).

Jeep CJ-7, Jeep CJ-8, Jeep TJ, Jeep JK, and Jeep J8 Egyptian-produced KADER versions used by the Egyptian Army.[15]

CJ-5 version used by the Salvadoran Army during the Salvadoran Civil War.

Jeep CJ-7 (and Jeep J8 APV versions) used by the Armed Forces of Guatemala.

M38A1 MD, M38A1C, and Israeli-modified versions used by the Israel Defense Forces and Israel security forces; replaced by the AIL Storm.

M38A1 MD, M38A1C

M38A1 MD and M38A1C versions used by the Jordanian Armed Forces.

M38A1 MD version used by the Katangese Gendarmerie during the Congo Crisis.

M38A1 MD version used by the Regional Gendarmerie and the Lebanese Armed Forces.

Egyptian-produced Jeep TJL version.

M38A1 MD version used by the Myanmar Army.

M38A1 MD and Dutch-produced NEKAF versions used by the Royal Netherlands Army.

M38A1 MD and CJ-5 versions used by the National Guard of Nicaragua.[17]

M38A1 MD and M38A1C versions used by the Pakistan Army.

M38A1 MD and CJ-5 versions used by the Portuguese Army.

M38A1 MD version used by the Rhodesian Security Forces.

M38A1 MD.

Captured Iranian-produced versions re-used by Spetsnaz special forces teams during the Soviet–Afghan War.

M38A1 MD and M38A1C versions.[18]

M38A1 MD and M38A1C versions used by the Turkish Army.

M38A1 MD, M38A1C, M170, USMC variant, and USAF DJ versions.

M38A1 MD and M38A1C versions used by the Republic of China Army.

Non-state military operators

General references

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.kaiserwillys.com/downloads/M38A1-Data-Sheet.pdf M38A1 Data Sheet TM9-500.pdf
  2. https://www.kaiserwillys.com/about_willys_jeep_m38a1_history_specs About Willys M38A1: History & Technical Specs – KaiserWillys.com
  3. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7e/1956_Nekaf_M38A1.jpg M38A1 with hinged soft-top door
  4. http://www.m38a1.com/Models/models_original.htm M38A1 - The "Original" Round Fender
  5. https://www.scalemates.com/products/img/1/7/7/121177-38-instructions.pdf M38A1C 1/4 Ton 4x4 W/M40A1 106mm recoilless rifle - ScaleMates
  6. http://www.warwheels.net/M38A1DcrockettINDEX.html M38A1D Jeep with M28/29 "Davy Crockett" Tactical Nuclear Launcher – WarWheels.Net
  7. http://www.m38a1.com/Models/models_welding.htm Welding Unit Variant - M38A1.com
  8. https://forums.g503.com/viewtopic.php?t=149255 1954 M38A1 Welding Unit F/S - G503 Military Vehicle Message Forums
  9. http://www.m38a1.com/Models/models_m170.htm M170 - Ambulance Variant — M38A1.com
  10. http://www.m38a1.com/Models/models_usmc.htm USMC Variant - Differences between years and variants | M38A1.com
  11. https://cj3b.info/Canada/CanadaKaiser.html Kaiser Jeep in Canada 1959-69 – CJ3B.info
  12. http://www.m38a1.com/Models/models_nekaf.htm NEKAF Production Units - Differences between years and variants
  13. Colloquial usage of the term!
  14. News: 29 December 2017 . Arms for freedom. 2019-08-31.
  15. Web site: Kader Factory . Aoi.com.eg . 2011-10-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130723063918/http://www.aoi.com.eg/aoiarab/aoi/kader/eng_new_page_6.html . 23 July 2013 . dead . dmy-all .
  16. Conboy and Greer, War in Laos 1954–1975 (1994), p. 59.
  17. Web site: Flotilla Aérea.
  18. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Willys_M38A1_in_Swiss_military_service Commons category:Willys M38A1 in Swiss military service
  19. Kassis (2012), p. 51.
  20. Kassis (2012), p. 60.
  21. Kassis (2012), p. 53.
  22. Kassis (2003), p. 35.
  23. Web site: Flotilla Aérea.
  24. Kassis (2003), p. 24.
  25. Kassis (2012), p. 58.