ColdWarrior; Well, it slowed me down but I didn't stall out. Am just making smaller, lighter parts like brackets, clamps and stuff to route and hold down hoses, lines and wiring harnesses right now. Hard to climb around when one's in a plaster-of-paris T-shirt.
Plus, I've just graduated out of my no lifting restriction to a whopping 20# max... heck, my work boots weight that much.
Got a couple of antennas ( AS3900 for a SINCGARS set-up and an AN/VLQ-14 ) assembled and mounted as well as a little MAXRAD set-up that goes on the driver's side mirror bracket.
Got the new and improved steering box ready to go on but I may need an extra hand as the box alone weighs somewhere around 80# to 100#.
I've got to get three Morse cables made for throttle, shift control and t-case and everything should be operational from the cab. All the mounting brakets for the cables are already done.
M35michael; You didn't mention cab. If you're thinking conventional deuce cab it might take some hefty sheetmetal work to get the second steer axle in. I'd probably string line down the tops of the tires and down the underside of the bed to the underside of the front fenders to see how much tire to cab interference you're talking here. Once you get an idea then make a thin plywood or masonite cut-out that carries the spacing and general layout of the complete rear suspension from the mounting plates down. This isn't as hokey an idea as you might think. It'll give you a silhouette that you can hold up to the truck or frame that'll give you a real good visual of how the thing will look, lay-out, interfere. without doing any major chopping and wrestling of heavy parts.
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COE cab is a different matter; that may be a consideration as the front axle sits under the cab while the second steer would line up in the open area behind the cab.
Since deuce frames are straight you could certainly put the complete bogie set-up anywhere you decided you wanted it once you work out all the details.
I preach 'Do your homework first!!'. It's not going to be something major that most often shoots a project down. It's the little stuff like "Oh cr*p-- I can't grind off those rivet heads... they're what's holding on my cross-member... or fuel tanks... or some other pretty necessary component".
Or, perish the thought, you decide it just ain't gonna work then you've saved yourself loads of headaches and the possibility of turning a working deuce into a pile of parts.