Hey TJ folks, Im Keith. Long time Jeep wrench finally ready to build the jeep Ive always wanted. I want to plan for as many issues as I think I might encounter along the way. I have a degree in auto mech, years experiance at a jeep dealer, and a full shop to work in.
I was pointed here because the heart of my project is really TJ/LJ systems integration, not a CJ build, and I’m hoping to lean on the experience in this forum before I start cutting.
What I’m trying to do:
I'd like to drop my CJ-8 Scrambler body on a clean 05 TJ/LJ Rubicon chassis, with the goal of keeping as many factory TJ/LJ systems functional as possible inside the Scrambler tub.
That includes:
Rather than adapting all of that to the CJ firewall, I’m exploring grafting the TJ firewall into the CJ-8 tub so the TJ systems can live where they were designed to live.
I have had a great time replacing the fire wall in an old buick and it made the owneer very happy. I feel like I could takle the same in the jeep with good results. But I could be wrong here. Is this a bad idea?
Drivetrain note:
The TJ donor was originally an automatic, but I plan to convert it to the NSG370 6-speed manual first, drive it, and confirm full functionality before moving on to major tub and firewall work. My goal is to avoid stacking unknowns.
What I’m asking for advice on (TJ-specific):
I’m not under the illusion that this is easy or “bolt-on.” I’m trying to do this once, methodically, and with respect for how the TJ/LJ platform was engineered.
If you’ve integrated TJ systems into a non-TJ tub—or torn one down far enough to know where the bodies are buried—I’d really appreciate any hard-earned insight.
Thanks for letting me tap into the TJ brain trust.
— Keith
I was pointed here because the heart of my project is really TJ/LJ systems integration, not a CJ build, and I’m hoping to lean on the experience in this forum before I start cutting.
What I’m trying to do:
I'd like to drop my CJ-8 Scrambler body on a clean 05 TJ/LJ Rubicon chassis, with the goal of keeping as many factory TJ/LJ systems functional as possible inside the Scrambler tub.
That includes:
- TJ dash or at least all the functions of the TJ, HVAC, and air bags
- Factory wiring architecture (PDC, fuse blocks, grounds)
- Pedals, steering column, and safety-related geometry
- ECU/PCM integration with minimal re-engineering
Rather than adapting all of that to the CJ firewall, I’m exploring grafting the TJ firewall into the CJ-8 tub so the TJ systems can live where they were designed to live.
I have had a great time replacing the fire wall in an old buick and it made the owneer very happy. I feel like I could takle the same in the jeep with good results. But I could be wrong here. Is this a bad idea?
Drivetrain note:
The TJ donor was originally an automatic, but I plan to convert it to the NSG370 6-speed manual first, drive it, and confirm full functionality before moving on to major tub and firewall work. My goal is to avoid stacking unknowns.
What I’m asking for advice on (TJ-specific):
- Firewall reference points that are critical to keep correct
- HVAC vent box integrated from the TJ into the scramber body
- Pedal box, steering column, and HVAC alignment pitfalls
- Wiring harness routing or grounding issues that become problems when tubs change
- Anything in the TJ/LJ platform that absolutely hates being moved or re-positioned?
I’m not under the illusion that this is easy or “bolt-on.” I’m trying to do this once, methodically, and with respect for how the TJ/LJ platform was engineered.
If you’ve integrated TJ systems into a non-TJ tub—or torn one down far enough to know where the bodies are buried—I’d really appreciate any hard-earned insight.
Thanks for letting me tap into the TJ brain trust.
— Keith
