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I didn't see it but an old friend who is now past on told me they moved the USS ALABAMA with a M816. He was an employee at the museum and a real stand up guy.I wounder if this is the heaviest weight towed by a truck?
John - my flat bed is done, just need underside painting. Dummy king pin for retention/front support and reverse ramps for rear support. Self loading using winch like M870 hookup. Don't have working camera/smart ph at the moment...Am wondering if there is a photo of the steel plate you mentioned put onto the 5th wheel. Interested to see how it is attached and whether it is designed to be easily removable. Am still looking into the ballast box concept for better bobtailed traction.
Looks like the tires are flattened a little in picture #4. Either the CTIS is set low or there is serious weight on the truck.I bet ya the truck is not doing the pulling, I bet
ya the main winch is. There are 3 winches on
the rear of a HET yes? The HET is prob
just a mobile winch platform. Pulling all
that w/ driveline will tear up a trans I bet.
Detroit 8V92TA 500 hp 1470 lb ft torque engine > Allison CLT-754 5 speed transmission > Oshkosh 55000 2 speed transfer > Rockwell SVI5MR planetary 7.36:1 planetary axles in 8x8 config with 16R20 tires. The final drive ratio in low 1st is around 100:1.What is the drive train of these trucks?
Ha ha - that brings back memories - those are the 8-DMRV5's - they were 17" bore and 20" stroke - the RV-5 killed Enterprise as there were quite a few crankshaft failures...Biggest engine I have ever worked with was an inline 8 cylinder DeLaval Enterprise 3050 kW backup diesel generator for nuclear service. It was basically a tugboat engine certified for nuclear use. Not very reliable. One of the Enterprise engines broke a crank somewhere in the U.S., so they derated it from 3500 kW to 3050 kW (if memory is correct). I always climbed on top of the catwalk above the cylinder heads during startup and first running because they were known to sling rods on a few occasions causing multiple fatalities. Think it was 20" bore and 20" stroke. Woodward governor and a butterfly valve on the intake before the massive air/water intercooler in case of a runaway. Only run it an hour per month and 24 hours once a year. Huge turbo on it.
The other 2 backup diesel generators at the same nuclear power plant are EMD V16's, which are basically out of locomotives.