Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!
I recently bought two of theses trailers, piggy-backed them together via the pintle hooks and towed them 400 miles across Texas... The only "event" was when a deer ran out in front of me on a backroad at night... that was kind of thrilling, but my 1/2 ton Silverado handled the trailers nicely...I bought a M332, Ammo Trailer to tow behind my M1009. Has any one else done this? I know the trailers are made for 2 ½ ton. But I have used them in the Army to haul light loads.
When I got the tank on and stood back and looked at it, I thought "time to get the spray gun out and shoot the tank O.D."I never thought about doing that with that trailer. What a cool way to put a tanker together. And it looks almost like it was built to be a tanker trailer too.
There was a little "slop", about 1/8th inch in the yaw axis (side to side) at the top of my fabricated hitch... And yes, they worked. They weren't there to prevent the hitch from SLIDING out, just to control a very slight rocking back and forth action, bascially noticeable when there wasn't a load on the trailer... And notice everything was tripple-safety-chained, including the rear trailer. A deer ran out in front of me at night on the 400 mile way home and they did fine. This isn't a permanent hitch, just a one way ticket home. The straps locked the hitch tight, they had adequate strength to keep the slop out.Do you really feel those straps help keep the trailer hitch in place?
True but better we cut them up to make new uses for these trailers then the scrap man cut them up.When I got the tank on and stood back and looked at it, I thought "time to get the spray gun out and shoot the tank O.D."
I hated taking a cutting torch to the M332, and each time I wacked off some unwanted metal I kept thinking "This poor trailer was probably up the road from me when I was in Vietnam... Should I be doing this to a war veteran?"
When I was last at Fort Hood, The G.L. site manager there (great guy named Paul) told me someone was buying the M105s, taking the wheels off and selling the bodies to a scrap metal place. Darned near made me cry...True but better we cut them up to make new uses for these trailers then the scrap man cut them up.
We get it, advertisements are annoying!
Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!