Both the 30 and 60 had GREAT engine reliability. Rare was it that they had engine problems. And engine problems were easy for the soldiers to fix. The digital stuff in the control panel was a real eye opener for soldiers. They had lots of trouble troubleshooting the digital systems at first. And still do, although it's better. Take a look at the troubleshooting sections of the manuals. You see a whole lot of, "Notify Higher Level of Maintenance". And lots of the faults rotate around the I&O device, the Backplane, the printed circuit board and the CIM. All high dollar items, if you need to get one. Take a look at some of the treads on the Forum. Water in the CIM is normal. Nothing works when you have that problem. Lots of problems in the troubleshooting tell you to change the Backplane. Its what the soldiers did first, for most problems they could not figure out. Changing the Dam* thing is something you do when you have taken your patience pill first. Looks simple, until you get to the two canon plugs. There are some serious mistakes in the 60 KW parts manual, with part numbers. You order a volt reg for a 60 hertz model, get a 400 hertz model.
Having said all that, when they run, they run great! The printed circuit board, CIM and Backplane were once in VERY short supply. That got much better later on. And the CIM is in at least its third version. Color screen even. Would I buy one? Yeah, I guess, if the price was right, and I thought I could get me a few extra parts, to keep on hand.
Oh, the -B models are very sensitive to low battery voltage. Its a must, to have at least Red Top's in it, or Armalite or Hawker batteries in it. Lead asid just won't cut it.