zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Wrenching
/
Wrenching on My Jeep J10 Made Me Fall Back in Love All Over Again
Wrenching on My Jeep J10 Made Me Fall Back in Love All Over Again-November 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:13:34

What do you do when the years needs a transmission rebuild, but you don’t want to bother your friends to help wrench? You yank that gearbox by yourself. Very carefully. Here’s how I did it without killing myself, and how the process made me fall back in love with a truck I should probably sell.

I back in my pre-Jalopnik days with plans to do a full restoration. But with the new job came a desire to focus on writing about the amazing things that can be done with dirt cheap junkers.

Fast forward three years, and I’ve turned rust- into , off-roadable machines. It’s been fun, and my new promises to continue the trend.

The J10, though, has sat in my backyard, neglected, with a bad transmission bearing, a rusted-out exhaust system, and some Fe2O3 holes in the back of the cab and door jamb. I’ve said multiple times, even using a to delay wrenching. But only this weekend did I finally get around to taking the first step needed to get this beautiful full-size Jeep back on the road, so that I could sell the machine for a decent price to someone who can treat it like the Jeep Truck Royalty it truly is.

The only problem is, removing the truck’s transmission and transfer case made me realize why I wanted the J10 in the first place.

Though I woke up yesterday morning with every muscle in my body aching, the extraction was fairly easy, and I was able to do it by myself without dying a single time.

The first thing I did was remove (read: break) the bolts holding down the bench seat, and take that awesome throne out of the cab. Then I undid the transfer case shift lever from the transmission inspection cover, and unscrewed the dozen or so fasteners holding that inspection cover to the top of the trans tunnel. From there, it was just another dozen or so bolts to get the shift tower off the transmission, revealing the glorious transmission innards:

Things looked pretty good in there, actually. The synchros and gears appeared to be in decent shape, so I found it odd that the bearings decided to eat themselves (actually, it appears to be something wrong with the needle rollers). In any case, this sucker was coming out.

I crawled under the truck, and undid both driveshafts from the transfer case, removed the speedometer cable, and yanked the drain plug from the four-wheel drive gearbox. Then I just positioned my transmission jack underneath, and undid the five bolts holding the transfer case to the transmission.

I ratcheted the trans jack’s strap tightly around the transfer case, and rocked it back and forth a bit until the two gearboxes separated. From there, I just lowered the transmission jack, untied the transfer case from it, and gently wiggled the T-case onto the pavement.

Then I jacked up the frame up with a floor jack to give some more clearance, and pulled the case of gears out from under the truck, at which point I carried its 85 pound heftinto my garage, where it now sits, along with my now-sinusoidal spinal cord:

Getting the Tremec T177 four-speed transmission out took a lot more work than extracting the New Process NP208 transfer case, because the manual gearbox actually sits on top of a frame-mounted crossmember, with a rubber trans mount between the two.

I placed a jack under the transmission, then undid the bolts holding the trans to the crossmember, as well as the eight bolts holding the crossmember to the frame. From there, I was able to lower the crossmember. Here’s a look at it as it sits now that the trans is out.

With the crossmember out of the way, and the trans jacked up, I had to undo the transmission from the engine. This meant first placing a jack stand under the engine, since its rear would no longer be supported once it was divorced from the trans.

My oil pan is a strong, steel one with a thick metal skid plate. Between that, and the piece of wood I placed on top of the jack stand, I wasn’t too concerned with damaging my oil pan.

Getting to the top bellhousing bolts wasn’t hard at all thanks to the opening created by removing the transmission inspection cover. Check out that awesome access to the bolts:

Removing the starter motor, clutch linkage, and lower bellhousing bolts wasn’t even remotely hard, and while undoing a little exhaust tube that ran under the transmission was a bit annoying, it wasn’t too bad, either:

In no time, I had the transmission strapped to the transmission jack, ready to come down to earth. I gently lowered the trans until the engine oil pan sat firmly on the jack stand, then I pushed and pried on the transmission until it separated from the engine.

There was a bit of a problem once the transmission was on the ground, namely that I couldn’t get it out from underneath the truck, since the bellhousing was so tall. But all I had to do, there, was undo the four bolts holding the bellhousing to the transmission gear box. I was then able to pull the entire housing up through the inspection cover, and then place it on a table in my garage, where it now sits:

The transmission gearbox I was able to slide on its side under the truck’s frame rail, at which point I lifted its roughly-85-pound-mass into my house, where it now awaits a rebuild:

As the temperature drops here in the Detroit area, I’ll be able to stay inside rebuilding this transmission, before popping it back into the truck, which currently sits in my driveway, transmission and transfer case-less:

Notice how on the clutch cover above, you can read the date “16 Dec 84.” Yes, that’s almost certainly the original clutch, for which I’ve already purchased a replacement:

Anyway, the point to all this, is that wrenching on this truck has already been so much easier than wrenching on my . And its simplicity—the tiny gearbox with the cable-actuated clutch, the small inline-six engine that leaves plenty of room for wrenches, and the bench seat—give the truck soul. How could I possibly part ways with this thing?

But surely I can’t get rid of the gorgeous , right? Maybe I just keep both, and store them in a to prevent them from rusting out until I get around to them?

Oh boy.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Wrenching
Update: I'm Still Burning Money
Update: I'm Still Burning Money
When I I’d just picked it up from having Subaru BRZ/Toyota 86 front and rear subframes grafted into its crumbling body. When the car came back to me in May, the clock started ticking. I had until mid-September to get the engine and transmission mounted in the car, clean...
Nov 15, 2025
Feast Your Tired Eyes On Some Unrelenting Car Repair Horrors
Feast Your Tired Eyes On Some Unrelenting Car Repair Horrors
It’s the end of the day on a Friday. Whether we’re at work or not, your brain is probably elsewhere. So, rather than stare at your inbox, or a spreadsheet or whatever, why not stare into the abyss of this Just Rolled In video, where a guy with an...
Nov 15, 2025
Can You Solve The Mystery Of A Chevy Silverado HD That Kept Blowing Fuse Blocks?
Can You Solve The Mystery Of A Chevy Silverado HD That Kept Blowing Fuse Blocks?
Owners of old are to getting stranded and having to wait for a tow, but drift car driver was caught off-guard when the that tows his mysteriously broke down. The pickup refused to start when and his family were at a drift competition in Englishtown, New Jersey, and their...
Nov 15, 2025
This Restomod 1956 Hyster Forklift Is Certified Fresh
This Restomod 1956 Hyster Forklift Is Certified Fresh
It’s one thing for you to be forklift certified, but it’s quite another thing for your forklift to be certified badass. Most of the forklifts I’ve used at jobs have been unreliable, smelly monstrosities that have been repaired by . This restomod Hyster is definitely not like that. What’s...
Nov 15, 2025
I Ordered A Carbon-Fiber Roof For My Porsche 996 Turbo And I Might Throw Up A Little
I Ordered A Carbon-Fiber Roof For My Porsche 996 Turbo And I Might Throw Up A Little
I bought maybe the cheapest Porsche 996 Turbo—that’s right, —on the market a year ago, and I’ve mostly been happily stacking miles on the odometer since then. I have been working on making the car my own with a period-correct set of wheels, some extra carbon trim, and a...
Nov 15, 2025
Crappy Jack Stands Can Kill You, But Which Ones Are Safe?
Crappy Jack Stands Can Kill You, But Which Ones Are Safe?
Everyone who has worked on their own car has likely heard approximately one million times that you should and that it’s only safe once that vehicle is resting securely on jack stands. ? Given how relatively simple jack stands are and the fact that they have to do one job...
Nov 15, 2025
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved