Rubicon American Willys MB ¼ ton 4x4 Truck (US Standard)Ā
The Willys MB (commonly known as a Jeep or jeep, formally as the US Army Truck, ¼ ton, 4x4) is a four-wheel drive utility vehicle that was manufactured during WW2.  It is also one of the first military vehicles mass-produced in the US.
Ā
TheĀ Willys MBĀ (andĀ Ford GPW) US Army jeep is the culmination of war-time ingenuity, standardization and strategic personalization for transport of personnel and cargo. Ā Soon to become the ubiquitous, āworld-famousā jeep, the Willys MB and Ford GPW models were very effective on the ground, with many standardized features such as 6.00x16 tires, 60 horsepower at 4,000 rpm, a gasoline can bracket on the left rear, provisions for trailer lights, spark interference suppression, a blackout light system, twin top bows and sealed spring shackles.
Ā
Prior to the production of the MB/GPW, other attempts were made to satisfy the Armyās need for a light utility vehicle including the first prototype presented by the American Bantam Car Company. Ā Nicknamed the āBlitz Buggyā, this vehicle concept which was the first bid accepted by the Army, as it satisfied the Armyās Ordnance Technical Committee specifications. Ā While the āBlitz Buggyā did satisfy these requirements, Bantam was not able to deliver with the fiscal strength or production capability needed to win the contract with the War Department. Ā As a result, Ford and Willys were asked to product their own pilot models for testing, the results of which would determine the contract.
Ā
The original pilot models were submitted and named accordingly. Ā The Willys Quad by Willys Overland, the Ford Pygmy by Ford and the BRC60 by Bantam were accepted and orders were given for 1,500 units per company. Ā During these pre-production runs, each vehicle was re-named. Ā The Willys Quad became the āMAā, the Ford Pygmy became the āGPā, and the āBRC60ā became the āBRC40ā. Ā By July of 1941, the War Department, needing standardization, selected Willys-Overland to fulfill its contract, on account of the MAās powerful engine, silhouette, low bid, and because of the companyās ability to fulfill production needs, ordering another 16,000 vehicles.
Ā
Absorbing some of the design features of the Bantam and Ford entries, the Willys āMAā was then renamed the Willys āMBā, and featured the powerful āGo Devilā engine and a welded flat iron āslatā radiator grille (which was later replaced by a stamped grille in March 1942). Ā By October 1941, due to an increased demand for production, Ford was contracted to assist Willys-Overland and changed their modelās name from āGPā to āGPWā, with the āWā referring to the āWillysā licensed design. Ā During WW2, Ford produced some 280,000 of these vehicles. Ā A total ofĀ 361,339Ā (between Nov 18, 41 and Sep 21, 45) were build.
Ā
Ā
Product Highlights:
Ā
- Single 1/56 (28mm) scale plastic sprue
- Foldable windshield with canvas wrap option
- Optional tarpaulin canvas top
- Include Browning M1919 & M2 MG options
- Four US Infantrymen figures included