1982 Jeep Scrambler
#1
1982 Jeep Scrambler
Scramblers seem to be natural candidates for conversions, and Kevin and Donna Kaylin went all out with their big green beast. It all started when they nearly went over backwards on a steep hillclimb. Even though Donna often tells Kevin where to go—she’s a 911 dispatcher and he’s a State Trooper in Gaffney, South Carolina—Kevin easily convinced Donna that longer and wider would be the better way to go. Together they worked on the scrambled combo to create a one-of-a-kind mud monster that’s still a daily driver and can max out a ramp.
Starting with the front of their ’7 and the back of an ’8, they stretched the frame and body by 24 inches and slapped fullsize 1-ton running gear underneath. The bare-bones concept meant that super-strong components, like the Chevy running gear and custom spring arrangement, had to be used. The Kaylins even laid the purple tiger stripes over the green paint—their first attempt at paintwork. Cole’s Welding in Gaffney made sure that all the fab work was strong and right, and the result is a show-stopping rig that can still wheel with the rest.
Kevin says that there’s nothing fancy on the dash, just the appropriate gauges and no radio. He prefers the B-52-like hum of the 44-inch Swampers and the sound of motors singing and mud flinging.
Though not built from all Jeep components, The Kaylin’s Jeep rides as well as it ’wheels, and without the cost of the high-priced Jeep Rods so common on the trails nowadays. The bunch of awards under the Jeep’s belt shows that homegrown engineering can compete with the best and walk away from the rest.
Starting with the front of their ’7 and the back of an ’8, they stretched the frame and body by 24 inches and slapped fullsize 1-ton running gear underneath. The bare-bones concept meant that super-strong components, like the Chevy running gear and custom spring arrangement, had to be used. The Kaylins even laid the purple tiger stripes over the green paint—their first attempt at paintwork. Cole’s Welding in Gaffney made sure that all the fab work was strong and right, and the result is a show-stopping rig that can still wheel with the rest.
Kevin says that there’s nothing fancy on the dash, just the appropriate gauges and no radio. He prefers the B-52-like hum of the 44-inch Swampers and the sound of motors singing and mud flinging.
Though not built from all Jeep components, The Kaylin’s Jeep rides as well as it ’wheels, and without the cost of the high-priced Jeep Rods so common on the trails nowadays. The bunch of awards under the Jeep’s belt shows that homegrown engineering can compete with the best and walk away from the rest.
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