Hi, new member here. Been lurking for a while and figured I'd join and start a thread for my "winter" project. I'm calling this a winter project because it's currently winter up here in Canada and I don't have a shop or even a paved driveway to work on. When I feel like wrenching on my junk I'll probably be shovelling snow and waiting for days somew here close to freezing. If you happen to live in a warmer climate or at least have the luxury of a paved driveway, you're probably horrified. For the rest of you with a similiar situation as mine, you know my pain. I'm not a computer wizard, but hopefully the imagine I tried to upload will work.
This thread will probably be boring for most, but I know there's a couple people on here with a soft spot for this era jeep so please chime in if you feel like it. I have no plans to turn this into a crazy offroader. I'm simply going to slowly fix this thing up and restore it to a bit of it's mid 90's glory. Anyone with an attachment to a 25 year old 4x4 knows that it's basically just a shell to hang parts off when they wear out. Jeep parts happen to be really cheap and easy to come across. I know most of the quirks of these vehicles and best of all the thing is already sitting in my driveway, paid for. Oh, and my significant other hasn't asked me about "the white jeep" for quite a while.
So I bought this 1996 Jeep ZJ (grand cherokee) around 3 years ago to drive a bit in the winter. For some reason I've always had an affinity for these older chrysler 4wd station wagons and after owning 3 jeep XJ's over the years, I found myself without a Jeep in my driveway and I couldn't resist picking this up to fill some kind of void. I bought it from the second owner for $1250 (canadian bucks) who owned it for a few months before a track bar bushing went poop and he decided this Jeep thing wasn't for him. The original owner, whom he had bought it from, was a certified Chrysler mechanic working at a large dealership and I got a stack of his paperwork and records when I bought it. There was no rust (quite rare for this part of Canada) and I've kept it that way by emptying a can of Rust-Check into every nook and cranny every few months. The thing is literally dripping with undercoating oil. environmentalists are probably frothing at the mouth, but there's still zero rust so I consider it a success.
After picking it up I spent a couple hundred bucks on a new track bar, replaced some tie rod ends since I was in there and gave it a basic tune up. After that I just drove it for a while without any drama and eventually treated it to a new set of 30x9.50 BFG all terrains. Eventually the rad went, so I replaced that and kept driving it a bit here and there. It still ran great and I had around $2800 (canadian, remember) with brand new tires, lots of new parts in the front end, a new rad etc.
This is where it went from "winter beater" to "winter project"
It sat for something like a year until I decided I was going to turn it into a project. By this point it was looking a little neglected, the alternator was toast, front brakes were reaching the end of their service life and the once pristine interior now had a saggy headliner. I crawled underneath and noticed that the muffler was pretty rotten and would need to be replaced as well.
This is getting close to where we now sit. I replaced the alternator and front brakes a few weeks ago, bled the brake system, drained both diffs and gave it an oil change. Fired it up for the first time in a year to notice a HUGE oil leak just dumping oil out of the oil filter adapter. Sigh, more problems. I replace the oil filter adapter gasket ($6) and had the exact same problem. After some investigation I determined the oil pump pressure relief valve is stuck closed causing dangerously high oil pressure and as a result, it's blown out the filter adapter gasket over and over.
Now I've got a new oil pump on order and since I've got the pan dropped, I ordered a new rear main seal as well. Might as well pull the main bearing caps and make sure everything is up to snuff, too. After that, it will be time to replace the muffler - a cheap cat back with straight through muffler will do, whatever is cheap online, then I'll just keep driving it and fixing it when things break.