I bid on my m109 (avatar) without knowing much about the process or MVs. I won the bid on June 25th and got laid off June 26th. My original plan was to have it hauled, but that plan soon changed. It's 11 ft. tall, so it requires a lowboy trailer. I began making other plans.
I called them a week before the pickup date and asked "Does it have an engine?"
The woman who answered was insulted. "Of course it does, if there was something wrong I would have photographed it!"
"Does it start?"
"Call me back in 2 hours and I'll tell you." I waited 2 hours, called back and her answer was "No."
Long story short, I went out there with a hazy Plan B to have a local garage store it and work on it if I couldn't drive it home. I climbed up in it and it fired up in the first turn of the crank. Before I got home, though, it died dead because of a loose battery cable.
In my avatar you can see the blue '69 Bronco I towed home 470 miles.
Most of these trucks were in good shape when they left their units, but they are old and have usually sat around for almost a year before you finally lay hands on them. Time takes a serious toll on rubber parts. Mine had loose battery cables and water in the brakes. Another we retrieved from Ok. had leaked all the brake fluid in the main line out through the RR wheel cylinder.
My advice on driving one home is if it doesn't look like it has had parts stolen, give it a shot, but have a Plan B. Look for what could have gone wrong during the year it sat around without maintenance. Be ready to charge or change the batteries and DRAIN THE AIR TANKS twice or more if you still get water. Mine had at least a 1/2 pint (BAD!!). I didn't do that in the GL yard and I lost my brakes in traffic in Manhatan, KS.