WILLYS STATION WAGON for DAZ

Authors:
WILLYS STATION WAGON for DAZ

HIGHLY DETAILED 3d MODEL of WILLYS STATION WAGON FOR DAZ STUDIO 4 WITH IRAY AND GREATER.

The Willys Jeep Station Wagon, Jeep Utility Wagon and Jeep Panel Delivery are automobiles produced by Willys and Kaiser Jeep in the United States from 1946 to 1964, with production in Argentina and Brazil continuing until 1970 and 1977, respectively. They were the first mass-market all-steel station wagons designed and built as a passenger vehicle. With over 300,000 wagons and its variants built in the U.S., it was one of Willys' most successful post-World War II models. For some time after the 1949 introduction of a four-wheel drive option, the 2WD was sold as "Station Wagon", while the 4WD was marketed as "Utility Wagon". The 4WD Willys Jeep Wagon is often considered the first production sport utility vehicle. The Jeep Wagon was assembled in several international markets under various forms of joint ventures, licenses, or knock-down kits.
The Jeep Wagon was designed in the mid-1940s by industrial designer Brooks Stevens. Willys did not make their own bodies, car bodies were in high demand, and Willys was known to have limited finances. Brooks therefore designed bodies that could be built by sheet metal fabricators who normally made parts for household appliances and could draw sheet metal no more than 6 inches (152 mm).

The steel body was efficient to mass-produce, easier to maintain and safer than the real wood-bodied station wagon versions at the time. Within the first two years of the Jeep Wagon's production, the only manufacturer in the United States with a station wagon that was comparable in price was Crosley, which introduced an all-steel wagon in 1947.

The Jeep Wagon was the first Willys product with independent front suspension. Barney Roos, Willys' chief engineer, developed a system based on a transverse seven-leaf spring. The system, called "Planadyne" by Willys, was similar in concept to the "planar" suspension Roos had developed for Studebaker in the mid-1930s.

In 1953 the U.S. military included the 4x4 station wagon models 463 and 473 as non (standard) classified 1/4-ton trucks under Standard Nomenclature List number G-740 in Technical Manual edition TM9-2800-1.

WILLYS STATION WAGON DIALS :
ALL_WHEELS:ROTATION
STEERING:LEFT/RIGHT
LEFT_DOOR:CLOSE/OPEN
LEFT_DOOR_GLASS:UP/DOWN
RIGHT_DOOR:CLOSE/OPEN
RIGHT_DOOR_GLASS:UP/DOWN
UPPER_TAILGATE:CLOSE/OPEN
LOWER_TAILGATE:CLOSE/OPEN
RIGHT_SEAT:UP/DOWN

INSTRUCTIONS ARE GIVEN IN THE README FILE IF YOU WANT TO CHANGE THE PAINT SCHEME.
A TEMPLATE IS GIVEN IN A SEPARATE FOLDER SO THAT YOU CAN GIVE YOUR OWN LICENSE USING A 2D SOFTWARE.
4 OTHER TEMPLATES ARE GIVEN IF YOU WANT TO MODIFY THE TEXTURE OF THE PAINT1 SHADERS USING A 2D SOFTWARE: LEFT DOOR PAINT1, RIGHT DOOR PAINT1, SIDE BODY PAINT1, LOWER TAILGATE PAINT1.

Software: Poser Pro 11, Poser 12, Poser 13

Renderosity
Transportation for Daz Studio and Poser