not clear from pictures, already mounted on a deuce rolling chassis? you must have a hungry fleet nearby or a big airplane like a c 130. i was also wondering about grounding while you fuel up and refueling other vehicles. is that all sorted out? and oh yes, i did just have my morning coffee and need to pee like an old tired race horse. don't worry though i ain't climbing up there to do it. besides my aim ain't that good anymore.
ha !! good one.!. No worries, I can hoist you up there with my M62 !!
.. You can pee ON the tank, but not IN it .. Aim shouldn't be an issue.
1: Yes, there is chassis under the tank in the shape of a 1963 Army Guard gasser M49C that got a total driveline replacement in 1990 becoming a M49A2C (multifuel) at that point.. I bought it a few years ago direct from GSA.. After the Guard it was with a State Forest Service.. They torched holes in the original tank bulkheads and yanked the pump equip
to make a water tender.. Later, a State Park got it. They used it for dust control and campfire control.. They turned it back in to GSA the day it wouldn't fire and their shop didn't know where to look.. I discovered an inop fuel pump and the HH button was off...
2: The truck is mechanically A+ with 703hrs and 14021mi on a new dash-1D and a whole new driveline... I removed and sold the "ruined" tank body to a private campground , and replaced it with the intact OEM M49C tank body you see in the pics, which I removed from my retired/parted-out gasser M49C... Anyway, I finally have a "new" replacement I can go back to work with.. It will be carrying 200g of non-ethanol gasoline in the front compartment and 1000g of off-road diesel in the two rears as this tank body did when it was on my older M49C.
3: Yes, the grounding / bonding items are present and yes I was a qualified Hazmat hauler on the civilian side beginning in the early-80's .. During that same time on the military side of things I was using everything a heavy armor division fielded to handle and carry fuel, explosives, and 105mm willy-pete etc... We only used the bonding cable when dispensing mogas, plus the one time we did the aviation company's hueys during a special tactical move.. Most people say grounding, but it's technically called bonding, there is a difference between the two ..
We never bothered using the bonding cable with diesel even though we were "supposed to".. Was way too impractical when you are working alone and have a line of 30 or more mud-covered M48's or M60's in the rain and you have all you can do to not fall and break your neck while jumping tank to tank dragging a 2" or 2-1/2 inch hose through and across the slippery slop.. The consensus was a static spark was not gonna ignite uncompressed diesel fumes, but we had a habit of touching the nozzle to something away from the filler first regardless, because we were told some nozzles are bonded through a wire imbedded in the hose, and some are not... Never got a spark all those years except when I clipped a bonding clip to one of commos M882's, and the other time was the XO's jeep.. Those events are something you never forget happened.. Yes the radios and vehicles were shut off.. Probably a good spark is a daily occurrence for those refueling aircraft, I bet..
On the civilian side, there was no bonding equip on any of the trucks or trailers of the company I worked for who did diesel, fuel oil, and kero.. We fueled a lot of heavy equipment, cranes, and storage tanks for the paper mills, and dragging 100ft of hose through knee-deep mud and slippery paper processing slop, climbing up on slippery equipment was just as fun as doing the same with the M48's/M60s ..
4: I have what remains of my heavy excavation company.. The biggest equipment like the 2 cranes, 6 of the excavators, and one of the dozers were disposed of during the divorce starting in 2007, but I've been told I still have more crap than the county highway dept.. Still am operating on a limited basis (when my body cooperates) , but it's now mostly my own private road construction projects as large acreage parcels of the family farm get slowly divided and sold off, along with agricultural ditching and gravel pit/stone quarry/farmland reclamation projects these days.. So yeah, I suppose I could say you are talking with a professional explosives/fuel hauler and previous "combat" engineer here , who is supposed to be retired but having a real hard time letting go of it all
(both of my sons are professional engineers living several states away, with no interest in what I have.. Except maybe a jeep or two .. We all want our kids to do better than us)