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Early CJ5 dash pad

Discussion in 'Early Jeep Restoration and Research' started by mdmeltdown, Sep 5, 2010.

  1. mdmeltdown

    mdmeltdown Member

    I have been thinking about finding one of those dash pads that goes on the windshield for my 70 model. I'm talking about the first small pad, not the big ones AMC adopted. I have a question though. Is there an extra hole on the driver's side for the wiper wires to go through on those pads? If not, how does that work? Anybody got pics? If I find an old one, can they be recovered or is the vinyl glued or formed to the foam inside?...assuming they are made of foam
     
  2. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    AFAIK the wiper wires with the stitched pad go through a hole between the windshield frame and the top of the cowl. They do not enter the cabin at all.

    I have not taken the stitched pad apart, but the vinyl is definitely glued to the pad. My guess is that the foam core is made, and the vinyl is stitched to make a cover that is glued on. The foam core is bonded to a piece of steel (the back of the pad), and the vinyl wraps around and is glued to the steel, out of sight.

    The pad is held on by the windshield latches, and by little angle brackets with a screw that goes down into the windshield frame.

    I presume you mean the big pad that was used with the '76-on windshield. I expect that pad will not fit the earlier windshield, so you can only use the '70-74ish stitched pad, or the molded pad that was used for '75s and maybe some '74s.
     
  3. dnb71R2

    dnb71R2 SuperDave 2023 Sponsor

    I have this pad on my '71 RII. Timgr is right on with his coverage of the attachment and composition.
    IMO, this pad is absolutely worthless. It's decorative only. It does not offer any protection whatsoever. When you fold the windshield down, it becomes a protrusion that will snag on tree branches, etc. It also catches bugs, while flat-towing. Mine frequently loosens, and the little screws are tough to access. The little sheet metal screws that hold it on are not robust. I suppose it could be made to attach in a more secure way, but I don't see the point. Mine is sitting in the garage behind the air compressor. :rofl:
     
  4. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    They weren't very soft when they were new ... softer than the steel dash, but not squishy at all. I recall that you could push them in a little with your thumb if you pressed hard. I suppose that after 35-40 years of exposure to the pollutants and oxygen in the air they have hardened. All plastics seem to change given enough time. The molded pad in my CJ-6 feels like a rock - no obvious give.
     
  5. grannyscj

    grannyscj Headed to the Yukon

  6. ojgrsoi

    ojgrsoi Retired 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    It has been a while but the factory padded dash on a DJ5M that might be something to check out. IIRC it was universal (LHD or RHD). I think it may be too short for your application because those had the wiper motor on the inside.
     
  7. SandhillMike

    SandhillMike Moderator

    I had mine recovered. Tim is correct about the construction. IIRC it was about $60 to have it done. The pads on a DJ look like crud, and would be shorter than an original.

    BTW, they were able to match the original fabric very closely.
     
    Last edited: Sep 5, 2010
  8. mdmeltdown

    mdmeltdown Member

    Tim, so the ones that got a dash pad had a different dash panel that didn't have the wiper wire hole? and yes I'm talking about the early early one 70-74

    Anybody got an good pics....especially the recovered one? thanks.

    I've seen that aftermarket one AE Miller makes. I just wonder how big it is though since I haven't seen one on a jeep
     
  9. Zoomer

    Zoomer eJeeper (walking)

    Here is the panel that mounts to the back of the pad:

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]


    Here's a couple of pad pictures:

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
  10. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    This must be typical for the earlier dash where the wire comes out into the cabin.

    Later models (starting when?) do not have the hole in the dash for the wires. Instead the wires go up through the top edge of the cowl and are not visible.

    The orange Jeep pictured above does not have the exposed wires, and is a '71? Maybe a '71 Ren II?
     
    Last edited: Sep 6, 2010
  11. Zoomer

    Zoomer eJeeper (walking)

    Mine is wired through the cowl, but certainly could be a PO mod.

    The Orange one is mnemonic's '71 Renegade I (one of the few oddities built Sept 1970). It does appear to have the wire grommet in the dash from this view:

    [​IMG]
     
  12. WYOMIKE

    WYOMIKE Oct 1971 pic

    My 71 RII has it coming out of a grommet on the dash and then going up under the dash pad. I added a 3 prong trailer connector to the wires a long time ago so that it was eash to take the wind shield off without having to disconnect the wires.:)

    I recovered mine when I rebuilt mine, but kept everything original as much as possible. I reused the original hardware and foam.

    [​IMG]
     
  13. Chris Insull

    Chris Insull All roads lead me back to the beach... 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Mmmm... reminds me, I still have my stock original one up in the rafters. Pulled it off due to the cage down bars being too close to the dash for fit without modifying the pad.
     
  14. nickmil

    nickmil In mothballs.

    I've had several of the dash pads and none had a provision for the w/s wiper wiring. FWIW.
     
  15. 54cj3b

    54cj3b Member

    I have a few floating in garage Ill get picts in am
     
  16. mdmeltdown

    mdmeltdown Member

    Hey Tim, this is the first time I've stumped you on something...lol

    I thought the whole wire through the front of the dash was a little lazy engineering, but I'm trying to keep it stock. I guess someone at Jeep finally said..."hey this looks like cr**; why can't we just run the wires between the bottom of the windshield and top on the firewall...duh"
     
  17. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Well, 1970 was early for me. I didn't start driving much until 1971, and then I started driving to the Jeep dealer and hanging out around Jeeps and Jeep people. I also made some friends there, which was no small part of why I hung around so much. They indulged my interest, and I am grateful.

    Yep. If the hole in the cowl is big enough, you don't pinch the wires. And the triple wire they used to connect the wipers is pretty stiff, and feeds down into the cowl ok.

    I think they picked the easy targets for the Intermediate changes, and that must have been one of them. It seems like Kaiser didn't have much enthusiasm for making improvements by the time they sold to AMC.
     
    Last edited: Sep 7, 2010
  18. 54cj3b

    54cj3b Member

    Thought I had full ones ones I have are 1/2 pads
     
  19. Zoomer

    Zoomer eJeeper (walking)

    What's a 1/2 pad?
     
  20. 54cj3b

    54cj3b Member

    covers only drivers side
    there out of postal jeeps

    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Sep 13, 2010