The ACTUAL first SUV

Ойындар

Much of the information and photos in this video come from this amazing book called "The International Scout Encyclopedia" by Jim Allen and John Glancy
www.amazon.com/International-...
The International Harvester Scout came out back in 1961, and since then Sport Utility Vehicles have only grown in popularity. In this video we look at this early SUV and why it made such an impact in the automotive world
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Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing."
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Пікірлер: 491

  • @user-sm2hs5du9g
    @user-sm2hs5du9g10 ай бұрын

    The Scout was made at the Fort Wayne, Indiana plant and my Dad was transferred from the Springfield, Ohio plant to set up the assembly line design and for timing all the piece work jobs. I graduated from high school and spent the summer of 1961 actually working on a Scout sub-assembly line where I was responsible for spot welding the front fenders and the grill. My work schedule was from 3:30 PM to Midnight and I made up to $2.99 per hour. It was a tough job but gave me incentive to go on to college at Ohio State to eventually become an accountant and then work at various International Harvester locations for the next 17 years. I loved driving the Scout on business trips. Good memories.

  • @kemoayers8272

    @kemoayers8272

    3 ай бұрын

    Wow. I'm just thinking because you were working on the things I love the summer I was born.

  • @carls6359
    @carls635910 ай бұрын

    I’m a Scout fan; my brother still owns 2 different Scout IIs; however the Willys wagons; and the Jeepsters pre date the IHs by at least a decade.

  • @prophetofevil

    @prophetofevil

    3 ай бұрын

    it not only predated the International by a decade, it was a better built suv, it could be bought with a tent that attacked to the opened rear hatch .................. but who really cares, all those old vehicles are better than anything we have to choose from today ...........................

  • @5stardave
    @5stardave10 ай бұрын

    1946 Willys Wagon has the title of the original SUV if you require 4 wheel drive, if not, the 1935 Chevy Suburban does.

  • @novampires223

    @novampires223

    9 ай бұрын

    My first hot rod was a 1936 Chevy suburban😂

  • @stupidvideos1449

    @stupidvideos1449

    5 ай бұрын

    Those are metal bodied wagons, not SUVs

  • @5stardave

    @5stardave

    5 ай бұрын

    @@stupidvideos1449 what makes an SUV?

  • @steveosterman2179

    @steveosterman2179

    4 ай бұрын

    AKA Willys Utility Wagon. If the name is any indication, I'd say Willys had the binder beat by 14 years.

  • @prophetofevil

    @prophetofevil

    3 ай бұрын

    the 46 Willey's could be bought with a tent that attacked to the opened rear hatch .................. but who really cares, all those old vehicles are better than anything we have to choose from today ...........................

  • @okieshortriderz
    @okieshortriderz10 ай бұрын

    Out of the hundred cars I have owned, my ‘63 Scout was by far the most fun. Lay down the windshield, top off, doors off, it was a blast, and that little pickup bed carried everything we needed. The slant 4 had plenty of power, and was easier to use in rough terrain than a V-8. The distributor cap with 4 blanked off posts was engineering genius.

  • @Bohonk212

    @Bohonk212

    10 ай бұрын

    Had a '64 red/white and fully agree. Had some odd electrical problem which prevented me from driving more than 20 miles from home (never did figure that out) but was a blast within that area. Dragged trees out of the woods for firewood. Plowed the snow off my dirt driveway with a plywood plank plow. And just fun to go steep.

  • @ontogeny6474

    @ontogeny6474

    10 ай бұрын

    I remember when IH offered a diesel in the Scout. Dang I wanted it-- but was still too young to drive. :D

  • @levyoliver5363

    @levyoliver5363

    9 ай бұрын

    Wow..better a 4 cylinder engine. Because its easy on gas than a V8

  • @levyoliver5363

    @levyoliver5363

    9 ай бұрын

    @@ontogeny6474 Me too.. i wanted a Scout before.. but i was still a child yet at that time..

  • @palco22
    @palco2210 ай бұрын

    I miss the Scout. Back in the day I was always gone camping, fishing and hunting. I've had Jeeps (CJ5) and they were great but very small I've had a Chevy Blazer (Very disappointing) but the Scout II (304 V8) was just down right fantastic ! My needs changed (Marriage, kids etc.) building a house, I needed a pick up and still have today. Sad day when Scout left the scene. Great video ! It would be a welcome sight if VW came back with a new Scout, as long as it's not an EV.

  • @dyer2cycle

    @dyer2cycle

    10 ай бұрын

    right on...especially the part about it NOT being an EV...

  • @alantoon5708

    @alantoon5708

    10 ай бұрын

    I drove one for several years. One person called it my "urban assault vehicle". The back seats were taken out so there was plenty of space to carry stuff....like band equipment. In its' previous life it was a delivery vehicle!

  • @augsu

    @augsu

    10 ай бұрын

    I have a 64 Scout and a bunch of other vintage rigs that I love, but a new scout with an ICE would be a disaster. An all Aluminum, compound turbo engine with timing chains everywhere, MAF MAP IAT IAP sensors... No thank you. If it don't got timing gears a carburetor and a high Nickel block I'm not interested. A torque monster super simple EV drivetrain would be awesome though.

  • @dyer2cycle

    @dyer2cycle

    10 ай бұрын

    Agreed, IF they came out with a new Scout, it wouldn't really be anything like a REAL Scout, the old ones we remember and love..it would probably be about as much like a real Scout as the new Chevy "Blazer" is like a real '69-'91 Blazer...I love Studebakers,and I always hear people saying"I wish they still made Studebakers"..and I say, Why?..if they did, they would just be an ugly crossover or sedan that would look just like a Kia, Hyundai, Ford, Chevy, or any of the other look-alikes...@@augsu

  • @PMaynard-22

    @PMaynard-22

    9 ай бұрын

    A new Scout EV is coming out@@dyer2cycle

  • @alanquintus2069
    @alanquintus20694 күн бұрын

    I learned to drive in a 68 Scout 800. I was 8 yrs old. We had it until the early 90s. It was a snow plowing beast. The wipers, heater and radio were challenges 😮. I miss that old boy. Was a hell of a machine

  • @gerrbearlavallee6687
    @gerrbearlavallee668710 ай бұрын

    I loved my 1960 Willys Station Wagon. A model that Willys started producing in 1947. The first real SUV

  • @s.e.bartels6667

    @s.e.bartels6667

    10 ай бұрын

    Agreed! The Jeep was the first SUV, everything else was second.

  • @glennso47

    @glennso47

    10 ай бұрын

    The movie It’s A Mad Mad Mad Mad World Terry Thomas was driving a Jeep Wagon in the desert while he was collecting cactus 🌵

  • @glennso47

    @glennso47

    10 ай бұрын

    @@s.e.bartels6667I thought the Chevy Suburban was the original SUV since it dates back to the 1930s.

  • @CarswithNash

    @CarswithNash

    10 ай бұрын

    Wrong, the Crosley SUV in 1947 was the first and also first use of the name.

  • @s.e.bartels6667

    @s.e.bartels6667

    10 ай бұрын

    @@CarswithNash They had to use SUV because the word Jeep was already taken :)

  • @randywatkins2359
    @randywatkins2359Күн бұрын

    Love it! Your take at the end with VW owning the rights to the Scout and finding out it’s electric and swiftly dismissing it is truly awesome. As a fan of the internal combustion engine I applaud you sir!

  • @jamesrice6096
    @jamesrice609610 ай бұрын

    Grew up in a scout. As a baby I rode in a cardboard box on the floorboard. No seat belts. Learned to drive in it. Drove it all through highschool with the top off, windshield down, and a pair of ski goggles. Great at the drive in with a load of friends on the square, steel, "seat"/fenders in the back. No seat belt vehicles were grand-fathered for a time. It was a late 65 80 series, dad always wished he'daybe waited for the bucket seats and " other half" of the engine to be available as the V8. IH aimed for something better than the jeep, and they scored big time. It was in the family till around 90 something when dad got rear ended early in the morning. No one was hurt. He let it go for $500.

  • @ribbetribbet1161

    @ribbetribbet1161

    8 ай бұрын

    Great story brother. Thanks 🇺🇸

  • @Foxonian
    @Foxonian10 ай бұрын

    My dad owned two Scouts. A '71 800B and a '76 Traveller. Both were custom ordered right hand drive since my dad was a rural postal carrier and needed then to deliver mail in the hilltowns. I actually learned how to drive on the RHD Traveller when I was 16.

  • @nedludd7622
    @nedludd762211 ай бұрын

    A friend of mine had an Austin Champ 4x4(the British jeep). We would drive it off-road in the California mountains and deserts. It had some innovative features.

  • @-oiiio-3993

    @-oiiio-3993

    10 ай бұрын

    With the Rolls Royce engine?

  • @boblister665
    @boblister66510 ай бұрын

    The Willy's wagon was long before the Scout. First offered 1946

  • @johnh3476

    @johnh3476

    10 ай бұрын

    Yep, he is Scout fanboy. Gen 1 Scouts ride awful, noisy, vacuum wipers were a joke.

  • @TheCharleseye

    @TheCharleseye

    9 ай бұрын

    Suburban. 1934 as a 1935.

  • @steveosterman2179

    @steveosterman2179

    4 ай бұрын

    Well, in all fairness, the Willys's vacuum wipers with their Rube Goldberg pulleys weren't anything to brag about...

  • @ewbait
    @ewbait3 ай бұрын

    My dad had a Scout growing up. Going to the dunes to offroad, having the top off down the highway, it was great.

  • @cheekymonkey444
    @cheekymonkey4442 ай бұрын

    I owned two scouts. A '68 800 and a '69 800A. They were both V-8's. The 800A was a three speed non-synchro first gear, and the 800 was a 4 speed with a rare overdrive unit. The downfall was that they were rust buckets. They were rusting away even out of the factory. If IH would have paid attention to corrosion resistance, they would have been on top of the 4WD heap. You could park them in your garage and sit there and listen to them rust away. I eventually junked both. The main body mounts rotted away, and IH didn't offer replacement mounts. Shame. I loved those Scouts.

  • @towgod7985
    @towgod79853 ай бұрын

    This is only the 3rd video I've seen from this channel and it is already better than 90% of the others out there! No politics or agenda, a video just about cars.

  • @Thx1138sober
    @Thx1138sober3 ай бұрын

    My dad owned 3 farms and bought one in 1963 so he used it to get around on the farms. What I remember most about it was that the windshield wipers were powered by air pressure, so that when you stopped at a stop light or anytime the engine was at idle, they would almost stop working and they sounded like the sucking machine at the dentist's office.

  • @craigcook1571
    @craigcook157110 ай бұрын

    My dad drove an international scout while Vietnam, 1966-1968. He swore by it. I asked him about the ford bronco one time being we were a ford family (pickup and cars) and he said all the bronco’s were good for in Vietnam was leaving you stranded. They just wouldn’t go where the scouts would, and if they weren’t getting stuck, they were breaking down. On the other hand, after his time in Vietnam was up, we went to Indonesia for three years and USAID ordered international travel alls for them to drive there, and they were junk piles when they came in so they all ended up with Toyotas similar to jeeps with hard tops. They were fantastic, go anywhere and everywhere although slowly. They weren’t speed demons, but they were tougher than woodpecker lips. If I was rich, I would try to find one of them and restore it. I would paint it green with the very top being white, like that one was

  • @ericbuxton711
    @ericbuxton71110 ай бұрын

    I love my scout II! it has been in the family since the late 70s. Over 200,000 miles on the original 345 V8. Only bad thing about it was if you just mentioned the word “moisture” around it ,it just started rotting away.

  • @ericl2969
    @ericl296910 ай бұрын

    I have seen at least a hundred of these old Scouts (not anymore, of course), but right now I'm remembering a particular one. Back in aboiut 1976 - 1977 I knew a guy who had one of these older Scouts, and I thought it had a homemade, raised roof. It looked like a professional tinsmith had done an alteration to provide more headroom. All these years later, THERE IT IS, the yellow Scout in the magazine ad at 7:19 in this video! The roof of the Scout I remember was bare galvanized sheet metal, not painted white, but that's the exact roof that it had.

  • @masheldon
    @masheldon10 ай бұрын

    I always loved the Scout 80 --- nearly bought one once, but passed, because I was unsure about taking it to a crowded urban environment where I wouldn't have parking. Still, they have a utilitarian, pugnacious charm that I really like. Thanks for this video! I am curious to see the VW reboot, too!

  • @paulrose6359
    @paulrose635910 ай бұрын

    In the late 40's Jeep sold the Overland wagon. In my opinion the first SUV not the Bronco or Scout that came much later.

  • @webefree3125
    @webefree312510 ай бұрын

    I still have My 1968 Scout, it has the 266 V-8 and it's a Tank! I had it registered as a SUV back in the 80's!

  • @teds7379
    @teds737911 ай бұрын

    Now with it being electric, the U in SUV can stand for useless. Anyway I think it's so cool that the biggest segments in the market today, SUV's and crossovers, were invented by small players in the market--International Harvester and AMC, respectively (AMC with the Eagle).

  • @kirdot2011

    @kirdot2011

    10 ай бұрын

    Any electric vehicle is more or less useless... Emphasis on more

  • @levyoliver5363

    @levyoliver5363

    10 ай бұрын

    Is now under Volks Wagen

  • @mattwolf7698

    @mattwolf7698

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@kirdot2011Eh, many are getting over 300 miles of range now. This isn't great for off roading but it's perfectly fine for commuting.

  • @augsu

    @augsu

    10 ай бұрын

    Tell me you've never driven an EV, without telling me you've never driven an EV.

  • @levyoliver5363

    @levyoliver5363

    10 ай бұрын

    Okay. Sport Useless Vehicle...😆

  • @super20dan
    @super20danАй бұрын

    i had more adventures in my 65 scout than you can imagine. never left me stranded or got stuck

  • @gregbowden1552
    @gregbowden15522 ай бұрын

    I was 21 in 1984 Had a Scout II ,sleeping bag, cooler, couple pillows. Loved that SCOUT.

  • @calvinbass1839
    @calvinbass18399 ай бұрын

    Friend in college had one. Always wanted a Scout. Thank you for sharing. Have a blessed day.

  • @KevinWeilacher
    @KevinWeilacher10 ай бұрын

    That little 152CI four banger was a beast of an engine....Nothing stopped it. I had a 66 Scout with the 152 and it couldn't be stopped. Many trips up river with it and blasting through the wicked Erie, PA winters was always a hoot. A number of high school buddies would call me in the winter time for a tow from a ditch or deep snow somewhere. I'd love to have another Scout now but I can't afford the prices they are commanding.

  • @Tcrim354
    @Tcrim35410 ай бұрын

    I miss International Harvester, set many standards. I wanted a Scout in high school. However, I could find it’s twin for parts.

  • @OathTaker3
    @OathTaker310 ай бұрын

    My most loved vehicle I ever owned was my 1978 Scout, 2 door, steel top, automatic with the 345cid V8. There was no shortage of fun & adventures plus there was always a long list of friends wanting to get to enjoy the good times too!🇺🇸 My MoM had a 74 Travelall 4-dr, 2wd with the 304cid V8 when I was a preteen, lots a traveling with lots of room meant lots of fun!🇺🇸

  • @scotthutchens1203
    @scotthutchens120310 ай бұрын

    In the mid 70’s we had a 1972-‘73 International Travelall. Amazing SUV. Didn’t really need 4-wheel drive in the winter as ours did not have it and did fine without it.

  • @greatdaneacdc

    @greatdaneacdc

    10 ай бұрын

    Sounds like you got a pavement princess 😅 4 wheel drive where I roll …. Unless you like digging sand😂

  • @scotthutchens1203

    @scotthutchens1203

    10 ай бұрын

    @@greatdaneacdc Well, it was what it was . I make no apology for it, was my Dad’s vehicle anyway. I’ve had a Jeep Cherokee, Ford F-150 pickup and police special Chevy Tahoe-all of them 4WD and loved them. I would just as soon have 4-wheel drive but our eastern Pennsylvania winters have not had much snow in the last couple years. The Tahoe I have now does not have it because they were dumping police specials at 9100 miles-both Tahoes were bought at exactly 9100 miles. The first one (4WD) was totaled when a drug addict being chased by the cops came out of a side street and I hit him broad side.

  • @ericl2969

    @ericl2969

    10 ай бұрын

    @@greatdaneacdc Through the ages, lots of people have done lots of hard work off-road using two-wheel drive trucks. As an example, my dad hauled countless tons of firewood out of farm woodlots with a 1969 Ford van. That van had more ground clearance than the vast majority of modern 4x4s and the approach and departure angles were a lot better, so it's ability over rough terrain was absolutely excellent. And it could turn a much tighter radius than any modern large vehicle. Plus, with much lower floor height than a pickup, loading wood was far easier. If conditions were wet, he used tire chains. Lack of 4x4 doesn't mean being helpless off road.

  • @jamiebray8532
    @jamiebray853210 ай бұрын

    Keep making videos like this. I love this kind of content. You do a great job at it.

  • @OmarDenarzi
    @OmarDenarzi10 ай бұрын

    Such a beautiful video buddy, Thanks for sharing knowledge and passion with people like yourself.

  • @mrhonda1
    @mrhonda110 ай бұрын

    My parents always talked fondly of riding in their friend's Scout when they visited him out in Utah. The Toyota Land Cruiser and Nissan Patrol from that time period were awesome too.

  • @rickbeal1544
    @rickbeal154410 ай бұрын

    I had a 62 scout for my first truck. It was gutless with a 4 cylinder and broke down a lot. It helped me learn how to work on cars,

  • @PMaynard-22
    @PMaynard-2210 ай бұрын

    It was the Willys Wagon. Btw I was a Scout owner for over 20 years and when I mention the Willy's people always go "oh ya"

  • @TheCharleseye

    @TheCharleseye

    9 ай бұрын

    Chevy Suburban. 1935 model year.

  • @AllenGarvin
    @AllenGarvin10 ай бұрын

    I may be misremembering, but I don't recall ever hearing the term "SUV" at any point prior to the early 90s. I grew up rural. My best friend in high school had a 2nd gen, and then later, a 3rd gen Bronco (locking wheel caps! his second had a working winch!). Other friends or their families had blazers or jeeps. We called them 4WDs or by their brand name. I don't recall connecting them mentally with the gigantic Suburban.

  • @lancerevell5979

    @lancerevell5979

    8 ай бұрын

    "SUV" is like "Crossover", basically just a marketing buzzword having no real definition, and no relation to any specific type of vehicle. People splatter the terms onto a wide variety of quite different vehicles.

  • @fastdude2002
    @fastdude200210 ай бұрын

    When I was a child in the 1970s my family used a Scout and a Jeep CJ to deer hunt. I still have the Jeep…..

  • @galerae947
    @galerae94710 ай бұрын

    My son's step son now has his grandfather's 70s diesel Scout with a removable hardtop. It is a cutie.

  • @OathTaker3
    @OathTaker310 ай бұрын

    Great video! You got a new subscriber here after watching it. You really got my hopes up about IH Scouts coming back then...BooM... I got that stomach wretching feeling when I heard those horrible, unsustainable words, as an EV! I will never own an EV, even an IH‼️

  • @ribbetribbet1161

    @ribbetribbet1161

    8 ай бұрын

    VW!

  • @jeepdogjl8687
    @jeepdogjl868710 ай бұрын

    At the Auburn,Cord Duesenberg museum in Auburn, Indiana they have a Scout prototype made with a composite body. Auburn is 30 miles north of Fort Wayne where they built all the Scouts.

  • @shawngoldsberry747

    @shawngoldsberry747

    4 ай бұрын

    Best 12$ I’ve ever spent

  • @-oiiio-3993
    @-oiiio-399310 ай бұрын

    You omitted any mention of the Willys Overland, introduced in 1946, only showed a brief image of one. Other than the versatile roof system, the WO ticked every box the Scout did and evolved to be Wagoneer and Cherokee.

  • @johnh3476

    @johnh3476

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes, the Willys Overland proceeds this as SUV.

  • @5stardave

    @5stardave

    10 ай бұрын

    Willys Overland was the company name, Willys Wagon is the vehicle you're probably speaking of.

  • @-oiiio-3993

    @-oiiio-3993

    10 ай бұрын

    @@johnh3476 _Precedes._

  • @-oiiio-3993

    @-oiiio-3993

    10 ай бұрын

    @@5stardave It was marketed as the Overland. Make: Willys, model: Overland.

  • @johnh3476

    @johnh3476

    10 ай бұрын

    @@-oiiio-3993 lol yes indeed

  • @DLeadVox
    @DLeadVox23 күн бұрын

    I love you. I owned a 79 scout traveler. I bought it used for $200.00. I loved that car and wish I had kept it. It was my weekend war wagon! At the time I was a working musician and that truck could haul P.A., Gear and Instruments to any gig and parked behind the stage made a perfect place to camp/sleep in. When I heard Volkswagen was going to bring scout back I was sooooooo excited, until I saw they were electric. NOOOOOO!!!! I have Blazers now, an 02 and 03 and they are falling apart. I can't find a new "SUV" to buy that isn't some over-glorified, middle aged, soccer mom, cross over with 1000 options that I don't need. And, WHERE'S THE TAILGATE??? I can't stand hatchbacks, everything falls out as the hatch hits you in the chin. I'm so angry. I want to open my own car company and make practical affordable cars that everyone can afford....(seems I've heard that somewhere before...) I would probably make the whole s10 line-up, Truck, Blazer, ASTRO Van. These vehicles did the WORK. I don't need a 5000.00 entertainment system in the back seat of the car for my child to be occupied for the 10 minute ride to school and back. I need a car that hauls gear, can leave the road, can be slept in, hauls a trailer, isn't ruined by pet hair, can survive spills and water where it's not supposed to go, doesn't slide on ice and eats through snow. Where is THAT car? Sorry about my rant. Thanks for doing this video. I just found your channel and I'm going to watch all your videos now.

  • @prinzchen17
    @prinzchen1710 ай бұрын

    I'm happy to see you expanding into the 4-wheeled world Bart :)

  • @bartscarstories

    @bartscarstories

    10 ай бұрын

    Thanks! Sometimes motorcycle people can be a bit tribal so its good to see there are fans of both

  • @johnmbrown7515
    @johnmbrown751510 ай бұрын

    I owned a 1978 Corn Binder with the 345 V8. IH was waay before its time. Had they hung in there and adapt with the SUV evolution, the Scout could have saved the company I believe. Ironically, the design of todays SUVs (Broncos, LR Defender, etc.) is trending that way.

  • @JohnAsmith-rw6uo

    @JohnAsmith-rw6uo

    10 ай бұрын

    I think you are right.

  • @Airking-yo1qs
    @Airking-yo1qs9 ай бұрын

    What a great story. My ‘68 Scout 800 was my first ride. That I was able to ‘go off road in’ was only topped by how much ‘gearhead’ work I had to do! Some joked that I needed a pilot’s license for the airtime - but I didn’t care. The Dana drive was awesome and plowing snow helped put me through college! BTW - profs to the MG comment when describing early history - That profile picture was taken with my B refurb and 100% agree on the ‘race engines’ in the old LBCs!

  • @ludercoarms
    @ludercoarms10 ай бұрын

    Great video!! I own a 1969 Scout 800, the third IHC Scout I have owned. I love them!!!

  • @tirebiter1680
    @tirebiter168010 ай бұрын

    The fact is the scout became the Traveler Station Wagon. Usually the travelers were only used off-road, when the driver had too much to drink and fell asleep.

  • @rehankhantareen2337
    @rehankhantareen233710 ай бұрын

    If you see the Suzuki Jimny still follows this concept of SUV like the International . It’s small , rugged , performs pretty decent on the off-road .It is only 105 bhp but does the job job.

  • @kevinferrin5695
    @kevinferrin569510 ай бұрын

    This is one of only two vehicles that I truly wish to own.

  • @porticojunction
    @porticojunction10 ай бұрын

    Excellent synopsis. Lots of lore to cover in the Scout world. Great footage from the old ads, fun to see. It might have survived much longer in the IH lineup if not for their reputation for rusting in the showroom.

  • @JoelHacker

    @JoelHacker

    10 ай бұрын

    We had a Travelall. Great vehicle, except for the rust! Toward the end, IH came out with some type of rust warranty. I don't remember how long it was. Not long after that, they quit making consumer vehicles.

  • @guypehaim1080

    @guypehaim1080

    10 ай бұрын

    It's too bad that the car companies think they have to make every vehicle into a luxury car. I'd like to have a basic, spartan, go-anywhere vehicle without all the bells and whistles, something like the Dodge Power Wagon of the 1950's.

  • @palco22

    @palco22

    10 ай бұрын

    Unlike the Fords and GM products of the day !

  • @jerrysingleton4956

    @jerrysingleton4956

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@JoelHackerI think they got a contract form Zebart rust proofing company, not sure but yet I am lol.

  • @ericl2969

    @ericl2969

    10 ай бұрын

    @@palco22 Right! There was a particular time period, I'd say late 70s, when the doors of Chevy trucks would sometimes rust right up to the windows in less than three years. Internationals were not unique in having rust problems.

  • @peterh4446
    @peterh444610 ай бұрын

    I learned to drive in a ‘73 scout. 444 4 barrel. Only design flaw was the distributor cap frequently cracked, water intrusion, stalling. Otherwise a great vehicle.

  • @LivingOnCash
    @LivingOnCash10 ай бұрын

    If you think the Scout was comfortable you obviously never driven or ridden in one. I bought a '63 Scout back in 1975 as my first 4x4. The thing rode like a tank and rattled your teeth out over bumps. I loved it though and would like to have another one now but they have gone crazy in pricing.

  • @glenmallory9982

    @glenmallory9982

    6 ай бұрын

    Yea I’ll agree. The original rattled your teeth. The 1970s Scout Two with the V8 and Chrysler automatic trannies were very nice by comparison. All it took was replace the stock shocks with Gas Gabriel’s and upgraded the shackles to Advance Adapters units and good set of Wrangler radials and a steering stabilizer install and finally the thing rode like a nice car. Been there, done that. I loved my Scout after we did the tweaks.

  • @glenmallory9982

    @glenmallory9982

    6 ай бұрын

    The Scout never got the attention from IH that it needed. Seems like it was unfinished in stock form. IH spent money on fancy stripes and plaid interiors but it was always needing a little extra work from a caring owner to be the legend that is talked about today.

  • @mattcom2
    @mattcom210 ай бұрын

    I appreciate your perspective and your research. It’s no easy task to cover decades of development in a field of special interest without generating one resounding clank after another as errors or misinterpretations pile up. Aside from kudos for that job well done, it would be interesting to know how you source all that video from KZread and elsewhere. Are clearances from each rights owner needed?

  • @cyrysvonnachtseite4546
    @cyrysvonnachtseite454610 ай бұрын

    It was called a WILLYS…. In the 40s

  • @kenyoung5604
    @kenyoung56049 ай бұрын

    I have a 2004 Suzuki Jimny (think Suzuki Samurai). I think the I4 engine makes 80hp. But it is short and cute and never fails to put a giant grin on my face. The Jimny is at my home in Italy. Stateside I drive a Chevy Express van. I cannot wait until I’m behind the wheel of the Jimny again. Only about 2 weeks to go. It’s also wonderful to raise the hood and be able to easily see the entire engine, fender wells, firewall, etc. There are some computers and fuel injection, but it’s still DIY serviceable.

  • @s.e.bartels6667
    @s.e.bartels666710 ай бұрын

    I thought about mentioning the Jeep Station wagon or the Chevrolet Suburban and how they pre-date the IH Scout but many people have already pointed out the errors in this video.

  • @ericl2969

    @ericl2969

    10 ай бұрын

    The Chevy Suburban didn't have the option of four-wheel drive until 1960. 4x4 models that were available in the 1950s were the result of customization by an aftermarket company, and if you want to go down that road, the Ford Model A was available with 4x4 as an aftermarket conversion long before any other vehicle mentioned in the comments so far (I don't know the exact year for Ford, but I've seen a couple of preserved examples with 4x4 which I think were from the early 1930s).

  • @TheCharleseye

    @TheCharleseye

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@ericl2969 1957 was the first year 4WD was available as a factory option on the Suburban. Regardless, that's just goalpost shifting. The Suburban was the first SUV. It came out in 1933 commercially, and 1934 publicly. It didn't have 4WD because virtually nothing did at the time. You do know that having the first capacitive touchscreen (as opposed to resistive) didn't make the iPhone the first smartphone, right? Adding features to an existing type of product doesn't make you first. The Willys Jeep and the Scout are awesome vrhicles. They're just neither of them the first SUV.

  • @LaurentiusTriarius
    @LaurentiusTriarius10 ай бұрын

    Up to 1988 our family had multiple scouts used as snow plowers for our driveway, like one per 2 yrs since they rusted so fast 😂

  • @kennethlindahl9206
    @kennethlindahl92065 ай бұрын

    the willys wagon was the first SUV. Introduced in 1946 2 yrs before the scout was conceived. I have ridden in both stock rigs. I prefer the willys, but the scout went on for longer. I drive a 2 door 94 XJ cherokee very much like the scout but newer and more powerful Better creature comforts too( softer seats than my buddys 1980 scout II ) The ability to remove the top made the scout cool.

  • @grantmorrey5138
    @grantmorrey513810 ай бұрын

    I have a 61 scout with a 3 digit serial number. Love it..

  • @Tracy81258
    @Tracy8125810 ай бұрын

    A simple, no frills car like the Scout would be my dream car of today.

  • @seed_drill7135
    @seed_drill713510 ай бұрын

    Hilariously, the Swiss automaker Monteverdi converted these into luxury models, called the Safari. You could even get a Chrysler 440 in one.

  • @Patrick-xd8jv
    @Patrick-xd8jv10 ай бұрын

    We had a 1966 Scout and it would go anywhere that you pointed it. It had Dana 44’s and a locker in the rear. Ours had the 4 speed with a non synchronized 1st gear which was a major improvement over the 3 speed. The real negative is that they were rust magnets

  • @flight2k5

    @flight2k5

    3 ай бұрын

    It probably had a limited slip. A locker was never offered as an option

  • @garthlundquist3623
    @garthlundquist362310 ай бұрын

    The first SUV wasn’t the Ford Bronco, it was the Willys Wagon. The IH Scout came along 10 years later, and faded from the scene rather quickly.

  • @TheCharleseye

    @TheCharleseye

    9 ай бұрын

    The first Chevy Suburban came out in 1935. It is the first SUV and the longest continuously running nameplate in history.

  • @dumkopf

    @dumkopf

    9 ай бұрын

    @@TheCharleseye no the willys jeep should be the first. The chevy being introduced first isn't enough. It only became an SUV when it got 4x4.

  • @TheCharleseye

    @TheCharleseye

    9 ай бұрын

    @@dumkopf If the definition of SUV was "has 4x4" then most SUVs wouldn't be. It's too bad no governing body agrees with you. Also, given that the Suburban was the first SUV, its characteristics at the time would be the first characteristics that define what an SUV is. It did not have 4x4, therefore that cannot have been a defining characteristic. Oops.

  • @grayman7208

    @grayman7208

    9 ай бұрын

    nope. the willys wagon was not an SUV. it was a UV ... but no S involved.

  • @jhastings73

    @jhastings73

    9 ай бұрын

    Quickly? You mean 20 years later?

  • @aar5pj
    @aar5pj9 ай бұрын

    I learned to drive with a 1959 IH Scout. It was a pure utility vehicle. Direct sales competitors at that time were the Toyota Land Cruiser and the British Land Rover. Here in Michigan at that time it was known as being a utility vehicle most often owned by Gasoline Service Stations and others who the owner would use for a Snow Plowing business as a sideline. The little 4-cyl. engine offered enough torque to do what was asked of it. a bare bones machine design that said all work. Later, it seems the Ford Bronco took over that part of the market. A great video!

  • @jamesrodriquez2863

    @jamesrodriquez2863

    9 ай бұрын

    It went into production in '61. It was still in pre-production design in '59.

  • @aar5pj

    @aar5pj

    9 ай бұрын

    I was told at the time that it was a '59 Scout, I was 13 years old when I learned to drive - on private land. @@jamesrodriquez2863

  • @kbenham7683
    @kbenham76839 ай бұрын

    The Scout and Bronco were refreshingly primitive in the over-styled 60's and 70's. Both about the same off-road, with the tires making the biggest difference, tested on the Capt. Cook Monument Road in Kona, HI.I imagine the Willys" Wagon was in the same league, but with an extra cool factor, with gauges apparently from a steam engine. Toyota Land Cruisers were getting popular. Land Rovers and Dodge Power Wagons were in the mix in the 1970's.

  • @lilredscout
    @lilredscout4 ай бұрын

    I have and drive a 68. Daily with another car. But I love driving this.

  • @waggitnshaggit6592
    @waggitnshaggit659210 ай бұрын

    Love it ! got a Red Carpet edition long waiting to get back on the front burner and eventually back on the road.

  • @vo1non
    @vo1non9 ай бұрын

    I had an old 1963 Scout way back in the 1970s. It was fantastic off road. I mean, really, really good.

  • @arthurbrumagem3844
    @arthurbrumagem384410 ай бұрын

    The Scout was one of the best true 4x4s ever. The first 4 cylinder ones were underpowered imo but since they were meant for off-road no big deal

  • @yournamehere6719
    @yournamehere67197 ай бұрын

    Bart: International Travelall was an interesting vehicle that deserves an episode. Ansel Adams had a few over the years, and had custom aluminum platforms installed on top for photography. His famous "Moonrise over Hernandez" photo was taken from the top of an IH Travelall. Also, you could go into IH history some: where were the Travelalls & Scouts built?

  • @geradkavanagh8240
    @geradkavanagh824010 ай бұрын

    In the mid 1970's, my school metal workshop did a total rebuild of an International Scout 4x4. It was done by the senior students with the understanding it would remain school property. (It was a private Catholic school) This unit was employed for exploration trips during school camps. Was great because of its 4x4 capability and could take up to 6 students on overland runs. I lived in Darwin, Australia at that time and saw a lot of wild country from that little pickup truck.

  • @levyoliver5363

    @levyoliver5363

    10 ай бұрын

    Wow." I like that. I have a dream of trying to remake the body of the International Scout 11 and installing it on any compact or midsize pickup truck chasis or body frame.." using non corrosive sheet metal.."

  • @michaelwallbrown3726
    @michaelwallbrown372610 ай бұрын

    i always thought it was the Willys Jeep station wagon built in 1946

  • @johnh3476

    @johnh3476

    10 ай бұрын

    You are correct. Or the bigger Chevy Suburban as well.

  • @Qrail
    @Qrail10 ай бұрын

    I owned 2 of the Scout 80. Served me well.

  • @sanniepstein4835
    @sanniepstein48359 ай бұрын

    Our Scout got its wheels trapped in the rocks in a mine dump. The rod twisted like a pretzel but the engine would not stall. Good or bad, I don't know, but it was impressive. Terrible rust, though, and loud.

  • @garycamara9955
    @garycamara99552 ай бұрын

    I had a 69 Scout 800-A with a 304 V8 a 3spd and a travel top. Our next door neighbor owned the AMC/ IH dealer. Sorry I sold it.

  • @errorsofmodernism7331
    @errorsofmodernism73313 ай бұрын

    My next door neighbor had a 1968 Jeepster Commando Hardtop in the 1960's

  • @RussellBond-dk6dj
    @RussellBond-dk6dj4 ай бұрын

    I own a 1964 International Scout with the 196 cubic inch slant 4 producing 94 horsepower. It's geared so low that 55 is it's absolute top speed but it's a true All Wheel Drive and it'll go anywhere I want to go just not very fast. The body is built like a tank and it laugh's at door dingers . Mine is the safari model

  • @peterjohnston8116
    @peterjohnston811610 ай бұрын

    Some of the video of Scouts driving off road have Victorian number plates and are right hand drive. Even passing a Holden on the left hand side of the highway. International also produced trucks in Australia, including for the Army which were used in Vietnam.

  • @auroramarquez4799
    @auroramarquez47992 ай бұрын

    It's because no one I've known ever wanted to be caught owning or driving a mini van. SUV were made for the cool peeps.

  • @guypehaim1080
    @guypehaim108010 ай бұрын

    Today's SUV's are used in the same way station wagons were used in their day. As you mentioned, it's the mom who drives to the food store or drives the children to their extracurricular activities. Most of these vehicles are never driven off-road. I venture to say a lot of SUV's are probably not very off-road capable. If I had the money, I'd buy the manufacturing rights of Jeep and produce the original MB, upgrade them to meet federal regulations with better materials, tech., and some optional amenities. I bet that I wouldn't be able to make them fast enough to meet the demand.

  • @STho205

    @STho205

    10 ай бұрын

    SUVs are short hatch station wagons cosplaying as a offroad ranch vehicle. Much of the car and consumer truck market is cosplay pretending to be: A race car A luxury car A mountain climber A drift car A euro sport But under the thin sheetmetal most are a Falcon or a Impala or a Gremlin.

  • @guypehaim1080

    @guypehaim1080

    10 ай бұрын

    @@STho205 Right you are!

  • @5stardave

    @5stardave

    10 ай бұрын

    @@STho205 In cities maybe, in the rural areas SUVs get you through the less maintained roads and winter months. Some SUVs are based on full sized trucks.

  • @STho205

    @STho205

    10 ай бұрын

    @@5stardave real SUVs. 90% of SUVs, especially CUVs, are 2WD cars with no real cargo area, summer tires and drivers that only go offroad when they accidentally back over a flower bed trying to park. I live on a mountaintop, on a rough gravel steep private road...and I have seen and hauled out many a SUV stuck in 2" snow because the tires are shite and the driver is clueless.

  • @palco22

    @palco22

    10 ай бұрын

    There are two very distinct SUV models. The useless ones are found on urban streets and the useful ones are found on rural roads. They look the same but are not used the same.

  • @newffer
    @newffer10 ай бұрын

    One of the big problem with the Scout 2 was it rusted BAD

  • @metricstormtrooper
    @metricstormtrooper10 ай бұрын

    I liked the Australian "Scout" overtaking the ek Holden at 5.48.

  • @Gee_Jay
    @Gee_Jay10 ай бұрын

    The term " Sport Utility " was already used post WW II by Small Car maker CROSLEY - of Crosley Radio and Refrigerators Fame ! - - Oh - and the OG Range Rover was just Honda CRV Size !!

  • @KDoyle4
    @KDoyle410 ай бұрын

    Many comments here state that the 1946 Willys station wagon was the first 4WD SUV. 1949 was actually the first year the Willys station wagon was available with 4WD.

  • @0Sirk0
    @0Sirk010 ай бұрын

    As a proud owner of a GMC Terrain, I wish i had a use for it's 4WD besides the soon-to-be uncommon snow storm. And with the lack of trails near me, its just kinda a tall hatch-back. With less MPG...

  • @6226superhurricane
    @6226superhurricane10 ай бұрын

    i think you have a misunderstanding of what an suv even is. the sport in suv isn't offroad ability that falls in the utility category. the sport was performance and comfort, it was a sporty comfortable vehicle that could rival a car but still had the utility to go offroad, carry gear and do work

  • @wickiezulu
    @wickiezulu10 ай бұрын

    Did wonder why IH looked into the B-Series and not the Austin D-Series (also BS1 for early 4-cylinder), which is funny considering the loose Austin-roots of the original Jeep though it did power some versions of the Austin Champ and Austin Gipsy. In any case the B-Series was capable of growing to 2-litres and the Australians developed it into the Blue Streak inline-6, which together with their own diesels was also used by Perkins to create their 4.99 and 4.108 diesels.

  • @aljaberhk
    @aljaberhk10 ай бұрын

    i think the blazer could still exist without the scout since the napco 4x4 converted suburban existed before the scout

  • @jeffthevideoguy23
    @jeffthevideoguy2310 ай бұрын

    I had neighbors whose dad worked for IH. They had a Travelall.

  • @scotthutchens1203

    @scotthutchens1203

    10 ай бұрын

    @jeffthevideoguy23 Through the 70’s and the early 80’s we had a ‘72-‘73 Travelall. It was very heavy and got us up Nittany Mountain in a snow and ice storm and didn’t even have 4-wheel drive. Just good weight in the back was enough to do the job.

  • @ericl2969

    @ericl2969

    10 ай бұрын

    @@scotthutchens1203 Our family car was a '71 Travelall with two-wheel drive, and it was quite excellent in snow compared to most other vehicles of the time. We sometimes put a few hundred pounds of concrete in the back for even better snow performance (but gosh, what a dangerous thing to do, since in a front-end collision that concrete might have sailed right through the seatbacks to hit the passengers up front! People didn't think about safety in the same way back then).

  • @scotthutchens1203

    @scotthutchens1203

    10 ай бұрын

    @@ericl2969 True! These weren’t attractive vehicles but we all sure liked it and were impressed with the performance especially one Christmas trying to make it up Nittany Mountain in Pennsylvania in really bad snow.

  • @jlinnlinn4241
    @jlinnlinn42413 ай бұрын

    I agree ...jeep wagoneer....I drove one home to lunch on the railroad tracks....yep complete with iron rails...try that with anything else....ask my younger brother. True story.

  • @geekhillbilly2636
    @geekhillbilly263610 ай бұрын

    One of my neighbors has 2 these IH Scouts (Running) in mint condition

  • @Anonymous_User_Incognito
    @Anonymous_User_Incognito9 ай бұрын

    I had a '74 Scout II I resurrected from the dead in the late 80's/early 90's. That thing was a tank- 304 V8 and I did a spring over axle swap to fit 36" Super Swampers under it. I had so much fun with that truck but alas, the rust monster finally had it's way with it. I think it did snowplow service somewhere as it still had the brackets up front and the rockers/floors were rotted out when I first got it. I patched it all but another 10 years playing in the mud was more than I wanted to redo (again) so I sold it. Dumbass.😅

  • @Walkercolt1
    @Walkercolt19 ай бұрын

    Go back to 1947 for the "first" SUV, the Kaiser Willys GLADIATOR!!! It was a four-door three seat (5 REAL ADULTS) Willys with a Continental I-6 displacing 268 CID Flathead and three-speed manual tranny, actually based on the Dodge "Staff Car" of WWII. Both 2WD and 4WD versions were made, but the 4WD versions were mechanically governed to 55MPH for "safety", as they were a danger to drive above 45 MPH just like WWII GPV's or "Jeeps" due to oversteer. A huge number were a medium metallic (sorta) green with tan fabric/metal tops. I believe in 1950, Willys made the mostly steel "Woodie" body-style with an all-steel "safety roof". My late uncle had one when I got into the World and drove it into the mid-1960's when parts became unavailable. It rode horribly, was noisy, wind got in EVERYWHERE, the "heater" was a bad joke, but they were nearly impossible to hurt.

  • @jamesheina6952
    @jamesheina695210 ай бұрын

    My dad was a big fan of scout especially the diesel version with the Chrysler nissan diesel engine we overhauled at least two of those in my lifetime i have a space in my ear reserved for the sound of those engines even 30 years later inspired by this after graduation (2000)the first car I bought (myself) was a 1977 international traveler that belonged to the gates oil company it had the 345v8 with a auto 4 speed, dual exhaust, 4wd, factory a/c, towbar, cc, clock, and awsome bench seats with plad interior, baby blue body with white top. I drove the dirt and the rust out of it never took it off road but it was just as fun on it I could make any repair to that especially as a teenager. What became of it is I joined the service and she sat eventually getting very rusty I ended up selling it to a collector whom got it running again and drives it today

  • @charlescolwell7927

    @charlescolwell7927

    10 ай бұрын

    You almost didn't get your diesel. The story was that Bill Kennedy, the head of the company back then, went out drinking with a group of dealers at the annual meeting. When Bill woke up the next morning he had a pounding headache and his underlings told him that he had committed the company to building a diesel Scout.

  • @jamesheina6952

    @jamesheina6952

    10 ай бұрын

    @@charlescolwell7927 odd little story, I was living in Honduras which is located in central America there they had a few of the scout 2's as government vehicles and they all had slant fours they where a light yellow with the Honduras flag covering the whole doors with black lettering saying: "GOBERNIO DE HONDURAS" (Honduran government) I don't know what became of those when I saw them they where not in great shape

  • @onetonlandrover
    @onetonlandrover10 ай бұрын

    Great video 👍

  • @MLampner
    @MLampner9 ай бұрын

    I loved the Scouts and it may have been second but the Jeepster was there long before the Scout. Unlike the CJ this was designed to provide comfort while still keeping the the ability off road and take the family.

  • @richardgreen1383
    @richardgreen138310 ай бұрын

    Sorry, the Scout wasn't the first "SUV" either. The concept of a large capacity enclosed body vehicle with 4x4 off road capability was the 1946 Willys Wagon. Also two door all metal body but a bit larger than the Scout or Bronco. By the time the Scout rolled off the assembly line the Willys Wagon had been on the road for 15 years and it had much more room. It gave way to the Jeep Wagoneer in 1965 which offered more comfort. The Scout was even preceded by it's IH cousin the Travelall which had 8 years on it. I don't believe the Travelall had a 4 wheel drive option. Of course all of these vehicles were preceded by the Chevrolet Suburban which was first offered in 1935 and also has the honor of the longest model name of any American vehicle. Initially in use as a utility crew vehicle it later came into wider use. Not sure if it was ever used for Sport in the 30's but it was certainly a utility vehicle.

  • @ericl2969

    @ericl2969

    10 ай бұрын

    I think that the Travelall first became available with four-wheel drive in about 1955. I base that guess on the fact that 1955 was the year that their R-series line of light trucks were first offered with four-wheel drive, and the Travelall was part of that series at the time. Travelalls continued to have the option of four-wheel drive for the remainder of their production. The Chevy Suburban was not available with four-wheel drive until 1960, though a small company was customizing them on the aftermarket with four-wheel drive beginning sometime in the 1950s (I don't know the exact year). However, aftermarket conversions to 4x4 don't really count, and if they did, the honor goes to the Ford Model A, since there was a company which was converting Model As to four-wheel drive way back in the 1930s.

  • @davewinter2688
    @davewinter268810 ай бұрын

    You didn’t mention the mid to late 1970’s Scout with the Chrysler-Nissan inline six cylinder diesel. A friend had one ( I think 1977 model) that would get 32-35 mpg because of its high rear end ratio but no towing power. He changed the ring gears and pinion (front and rear of course) which made it much more useful with some sacrifice in fuel mileage. I don’t remember what ratio the new gears were. I have a 1971 Jeepster Commando 4x4 with the odd firing 225 Buick cast iron V6. Definitely bigger with more room than a CJ-5. Not sure how it compares to a CJ-6. Front bucket seats with removable rear bench seat and small cargo space behind. Seated four or five in a pinch. Best with the rear seat removed for hauling camping gear etc. It was available as a half cab pickup, station wagon (both changeable from one to the other) and a convertible top. It was also available with a 4 cylinder inline ohv or 327 V8. It would do anything a scout would do. AMC ruined it with the wide white grill trying to make it look more like a Blazer when they took over in 1972. Before that it was all Kaiser Jeep design with the front half that still looked like the M38 military jeep.

  • @Bob132-ov6wk
    @Bob132-ov6wk7 ай бұрын

    My uncle had a Scout 80 and later a Scout 800. They never leaked, but he refused to take the top off because of fear it would leak.

  • @charlielaudico3523
    @charlielaudico352310 ай бұрын

    I drove jeeps and international scout during that Era,no fancy power windows,no luxuries ! You didn't need it! You needed reliable transportation was the main objective!

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