Thanks for the #'s !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Less than I would have thought, a lot less!
Keep in mind that the numbers I have do NOT include over ten years production by Studebaker, Studebaker-Packard, Curtiss-Wright, Utica-Bend.
Nor do they include the 1949-1963 production in Lansing.
So, the grand total will be a good bit higher.
Nevertheless, despite its almost global use and literally 40 years of production, there were almost certainly far fewer G-742 (M-35-type) trucks built than there were of the GMC CCKW and CCKWX between 1940-1945, which totaled over a half-million.
This says volumes about the difference in production for a "World War" and production for wars on narrower fronts (Korea, Vietnam, Cold War).
It also says volumes about our preservation efforts we alluded to in another thread. Lets say that there were twice as many CCKWs built and M35s (a reasonable number I believe). How hard is it today to find a good unrestored CCKW? How hard is it to find a good engine for a CCKW? Have you priced a set of tires for a CCKW? And, how hard is it to find a CCKW ANYTHING other than a cargo truck?
Think about the guy interested in OD 30 years from now - where is he gonna be chasing M35s and parts, when there were only half as many of them made?
You ever seen a CCKW water purification truck? They made them. What about a CCKW-based Engineer Mobile Shop Set (I know of two survivors in the US)? CCKW-based pole setter? CCKW telephone line maintenance truck? CCKW WATER tanker? CCKW decontamination truck? CCKW pipeline truck? CCKW mobile photo lab? They made those too.
Yet in the past few months on eBay we've seen offered Reo mobile photo labs, that somebody bragged about gutting and turning into a camper. Same with water purification trucks. Folks converting M50 water tankers to cargo trucks. A M764 cut up for its axles to make a rock crawler.
Best wishes,
David Doyle