RE: Re: RE: Re: RE: Brand new FMTV spotted
April 19th, 2008.
All things being equal, there's no way any of the FMTV's would have equalled properly modified and reengineered M35, M818, and M900 series vehicles...... If you want serious off road capability go for the larger series of modern M-series Unimogs, because that's what these remind me of without the axle flexibility. If history teaches us anything (shades of Young Frankenstein) it is that military missions are going to get more complex, armor is a given and up-armoring is going to continue, but simplicity of repair and reliability in the field will trump looks anyday.
For slightly more then 1/2 of what these European designed toys cost, we could've taken the M44 and related series vehicles right down to the frames and axles (and even replaced the axles if necessary), and put new powerplants, new transmissions, new cabs and fenders, and still had the reserve to overload and for the mission to grow..... The Army and the Air Force have the misbegotten belief that old is bad and new is good because our contractor's don't make as much on rebuilds.... BUT the one airplane the Iraqi's feared in Desert Storm, the A10, is an almost dead platform, and the AF is trying to convert the F-series fighters to ground attack... that ought to be rich.
The Marines realize that when they get a system that works.... they stick to it. The engineers of the 1940's and 1950's had no computers to fine tune and pare down weights, so they tended to overcompensate in the initial design....knuckledragging it was, but the bloody machines went like the B52, at least 35 years in most services and still operational. The Russians overengineered their vehicles also, and while they may not be pretty, they're simple enough even a caveman can fix them... The problem with our young soldiers today is that most grew up around the computer, not fixing Stone Age trucks, so they often lack the common sense that has historically allowed the American GI to improvise his way out of almost any difficulty.... But there has to be the basic solidity in the design to begin with.
TACOM designed the cabs????? They sure as hades look like European truck cabs, and remember, these are the same people that brought us the lovely electronic headlight switch that possibly a caveman can work, but I doubt it, based on the screaming I hear on here about them. (YES, Saddam's Nightmare has a TACOM switch fitted, and so far I love it!!!). No insults intended, but the basic M44 series platforms were much more substantial then the FMTV's, and I think even the S404.114 Unimogs had a better platform for it's size (but a LOUSY throwout bearing lube access design!!!), let's see if the new toys can handle 36 years of service and at least two wars behind them.... THEN WE'LL KNOW IF IT WAS AS CAPABLE AS THE DEUCE..... just my devalued
worth, and no use
, now for the
opcorn: and sit back and watch.
Sincerely,
Kyle F. McGrogan
1971 Kaiser Jeep M35A2 Wo/W "Saddam's Nightmare" Desert Storm and Vietnam Deuce veteran truck
""??"" M105A2 Johnson Mfg. Co. 1-1/2 Ton Cargo Trailer, MERDC or NATO 4 color woodland scheme, Okla.Army NG.
1967 MEP23A Hercules Gasoline Generator Set, OD and in excellent condition at 7 hours on guage...
1963 Swiss Army Cargo Unimog S404.114 Mercedes Benz in NATO green
All still doing what they're designed to do......WORK