With regard to your comments on the M151s, the problem with the M151 was not their propensity to roll over on certain turns. The problem was that someone sued the govt. and that ended things. Once the first idiot does something crazy in his deuce and sues the govt., they will stop selling them, too. The govt. is not trying to make a few dollars on each deuce just to be sued for half a mil because some dude drove out of a yard with a truck he barely looked over and killed a family of four driving a minivan. If you think I'm paranoid, just think about it for a bit.
I have heard this tale repeated so many times that for years, I repeated it almost ver batim to others in the hobby. One of those things where you've heard it sooo many times you just assume it's true.
Well, there was another thread in the last year or so and I was bored and decided to find the actual lawsuit info. I figured such a frivolous lawsuit would be all over tort reform websites.
I haven't been able to find a definitive "smoking gun" that's 100% trustworthy, but I believe the "M151 lawsuit" is an urban legend. I believe it probably started as a result of several Jeep CK lawsuits in the 1970's.
What appears to have actually happened was much more interesting. The Army wanted to surplus several thousand M151's and asked the NHTSA for approval. The NHTSA, looking at the Army's statistics of rollovers and driver deaths and the Army's policy of specialized training for M151 drivers, decided they couldn't sign off on surplussing the 151's.
Now, you gotta' take the following links with a grain of salt, as they come from the Insurance Institute of Highway Safety. They are a nifty little organization that represents the Insurance Industry. Their primary goal is to reduce their risk (without a corresponding reduction in premiums). If they had their way, we'd all have a 2 mph speed limit.
Let's start with this excerpt from
SUV Rollover News -SUV Rollover,Rating,Rates,accident,lawyer,attorney!
"NHTSA, by continuing to issue warnings is pursuing a path that it previously dismissed in the 1970s as ineffective. In 1971 the Department of the Army requested comments and recommendations from the U.S. DOT about its plans to sell Jeep M151's (the precursors to the Jeep CJs) to the public. The Army hoped to dispose of 73,000 vehicles in sales to the public over a six to ten year period which represented approximately $54 million in returns to the Army if the vehicles were sold. The M151 was well known for its high rollover propensity. On average about 30 percent of all accidents involving the M151 were rollovers. The Army proposed selling the vehicles with a warning label that read as follows:
CAUTION
This vehicle is designed primarily for operation over rough terrain. The design features, short wheel base and high center of gravity, establishes limitations in handling characteristics of the vehicles. Drivers are cautioned that there is little warning by body tilt or feel when turning corners too sharp for the speed of the vehicle. This could contribute to vehicle rollover.
NHTSA responded to the Army's request in a September 21, 1971 letter stating:
We do not believe that the handling problem, a propensity to roll over without warning to the user that rollover may be imminent can be adequately guarded against through the use of warnings . . . [a] training program for the public is impracticable. Even if a warning on a decal or in a certificate could suffice, such a decal could be removed or destroyed, and the certificate lost, and the purchaser or subsequent purchasers would not receive notice of the potential hazard."
So I kept looking and finally got to the IIHS reports.
Let's start their stuff here:
[FONT="]
http://www.iihs.org/research/paper_pdfs/test_19870306.pdf[/FONT]
"NHTSA has known about this problem since at least 1971 when its administrator refused, because of stability problems, to let the army sell surplus M-151 vehicles to the public. The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety published a very well-known report in 1980 about the stability problems of Jeep CJ-5s. Filmed test results showing the propensity of these vehicles to roll over were publicized throughout the country. More recently, a study by A.B. Kelley and Leon Robertson underscores the need for NHTSA to take action to prevent rollovers. Representative Timothy Wirth has petitioned the agency to "immediately open proceedings to ensure
the safety of the thousands of Americans who own Jeep-type vehicles which are unusually prone to roll over." So the evidence is clear [FONT="]-- [/FONT]
the death rate because of rollover is very high in many small utility vehicles and light trucks. Although the Jeep CJ-5 isn't on the market anymore, several vehicles with high centers of gravity and narrow track
widths are still being sold, new models are being introduced, and NHTSA should immediately begin rulemaking in this area."
Now, the paragraph you just read is from the point of view of the IIHS-their position is that the NHTSA should basically outlaw vehicles like this (jeeps of all types-not just CJ's or M151's) because of the risk.
Now, here is the well known 1980 report mentioned in the paragraph above:
[FONT="]http://www.iihs.org/externaldata/srdata/docs/sr1519.pdf[/FONT]
Contained within the 1980 report is the following passage:
[FONT="]1971 - [/FONT][FONT="]Then-NHTSA administrator Douglas Toms notified the Army that the safety agency would not sanction the sale of surplus military jeeps to the public because of the vehicles' handling and stability problems. At that time, M-151 quarter-ton utility vehicles Ueep-type vehicles) were built by Ford under specifications set by the military. Toms noted that Army records indicated that rollover crashes accounted for 30 percent of all the vehicles' crash involvement. (See
Status Vol. 7, No. 10, May 1972.) Subsequent studies raised the rollover rate to 66 percent. (See
Status Vol. 15, 7, May 1). Some of today's utility vehicles evolved from the World War II jeep.[/FONT]
[FONT="][/FONT] [FONT="][/FONT]
And here is a page showing evidence of a rollover test performed in 1973 by Ford.
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http://www.ncac.gwu.edu/research/NCAC Library Literature Listing.pdf[/FONT]
Now, the last time I looked all this up, I found some awesome archival data concerning the Nixon Administration DOT and their involvement with the banning of surplus M151's and I'll be darned if I can find it now. I am going to keep looking tomorrow because it had the most information and was the most detailed.
But from the looks of all this, I think before anyone ever sued the govt., the edict came down about not surplussing 151's. I think the litany of Jeep CJ lawsuits have somehow been confused with the 151. I searched everywhere and can not find anything concrete about an M151 lawsuit.