![]() 02/04/2019 at 01:45 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
I don’t see many of these around
anymore.
![]() 02/04/2019 at 01:57 |
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I see one every day... About once or twice a month I actually, drive it, too.
![]() 02/04/2019 at 02:23 |
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Nice. It’s funny how differently you see cars you haven’t grown up with. Jeeps of this era looked almost exotic to me as a kid.
![]() 02/04/2019 at 02:29 |
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Saw one yesterday being loaded on to a tow truck on the western freeway
![]() 02/04/2019 at 02:30 |
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about where I’d expect it tbh
![]() 02/04/2019 at 05:23 |
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That is an American Jeep. What was spotted was an Australian Jeep...in Queensland. It's like seeing an 80 year old hamster.
![]() 02/04/2019 at 07:06 |
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In case you didn’t see this a while back: https://oppositelock.kinja.com/jeep-trucks-in-australia-1832118145
![]() 02/04/2019 at 07:38 |
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I did see that. Interesting stuff. I didn’t actually know there were Australian built Jeeps before you posted that. In fact I’m slightly ashamed of how little I know about car manufacturing history here in general :S
![]() 02/04/2019 at 07:47 |
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I have t he same problem with Indiana’s history . We used to rival Detroit, but now t hat history is mostly buried in books I haven’t read or museums I haven’t visited .
![]() 02/04/2019 at 13:14 |
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Huh... I thought they might be slightly popular in Australia. I’ve been wrong before.
![]() 02/04/2019 at 18:20 |
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They were. But they’ve mostly all gone to pieces now...time and country have not been kind to the Oz XJ