This 1941 Willys pickup was used as a drag racer before it was built into a gasser-style hot rod in 2021, and it is powered by a supercharged 540ci Chevrolet V8 with Arias hemispherical heads, a COMP Cams camshaft, dual Holley double-pumper carburetors, and an MSD ignition module. A steel cab with a chopped roof is joined by a single-piece fiberglass front clamshell, and the bodywork is mounted to a fabricated steel frame with a straight front axle, a three-link rear setup with adjustable coilovers, and four-wheel disc brakes with line lock. The cab has been outfitted with black and yellow bucket seats, a TCI shifter, and Classic Instruments gauges, and other highlights include a TH400 automatic transmission, a narrowed 9″ rear end, a limited-slip differential, a wood-lined cargo bed, side exhaust pipes, wheelie bars, and big-and-little tires. This custom Willys pickup was acquired by the selling dealer in 2025, and it is now offered with a display board and a clean Pennsylvania title.

The steel cab has a chopped roof, and it has been mounted to a frame fabricated from steel box tubing at Vito Antonicelli Race Cars of Buffalo, New York. Bodywork and paint were handled at HarborVette Fiberglass Magic of Pennsylvania, where the truck was finished in House of Kolor Kandy red, according to the selling dealer. Tasmanian Devil-themed artwork and “Charlie’s Chop Shop” graphics were added along with pinstriping on the rear fenders and the back of the cab. Other details include wheelie bars, side exhaust outlets, tinted glass, and blue-dot taillights.

The single-piece fiberglass front clamshell tilts forward and has a cutout for a polished air scoop.

The 540ci Chevrolet V8 was built using a World Products cast-iron block, a COMP Cams camshaft, Arias aluminum hemispherical heads, a polished TBS supercharger, dual Holley 800-cfm double-pumper carburetors, a Billet Specialties belt drive, an MSD 6AL-2 ignition module, and stainless-steel headers with 4″ pipes and solenoid-actuated cutouts. The aluminum radiator is cooled by an electric pusher fan.

Halibrand-style 15” alloy wheels are wrapped in BFGoodrich tires up front and M&H Racemaster slicks out back. The truck rides on a straight front axle with parallel leaf springs and a Vega-style steering box, while the three-link rear setup has adjustable coilovers. Braking is handled by power-assisted discs all around with a line lock.

Raised Willys script accents the back of the cargo bed, which is lined with wood slats and houses the fuel cell and battery.

The bucket seats and door panels are trimmed with black and yellow upholstery, and the driver’s seat has a Corbeau harness. The dashboard is painted black, and a TCI shifter has been installed. The glove compartment door handle is missing.

The three-spoke steering wheel is mounted to a tilt column and sits ahead of Classic Instruments gauges consisting of a 140-mph speedometer, an 8k-rpm tachometer, and auxiliary gauges. The speedometer does not work, and the five-digit odometer has not been calibrated. Total mileage is unknown.

Power is sent to the rear wheels through a TH400 three-speed automatic transmission and a narrowed Ford 9″ rear end with a limited-slip differential and 4.33:1 gearing.






























