SouthwestUSA
New member
- 50
- 5
- 0
- Location
- North Central Texas
"Forgive me Father (I mean Uncle Sam) for I have sinned"
I am about to plunder, pillage and ravage my most recent acquisition... my really cool looking M332 trailer...
I originally bought an M105 to use for hauling an aluminum 600 gallon fuel tank I plan to use on my farms for hauling and storing diesel fuel. As I thought about this (after I won the bid on one of those surplus 600 gallon tanks at Red River Army Depot) I looked at my new tank when I got it home and "chickened-out" and decided the tank would sit up too darned high in the M105, making it prone to tipping over and lunging forward if I had to do a quick stop. All that heavy fuel at that "altitude" on an M105 got me nervous, even though I'd probably go into town twice a year for filling, and most of the time the trailer/tank would sit in a shed.
I found a couple of M332 trailers and saw that they have a lower center of gravity, When I got my M332's home, I parked one next to my M105 and saw that the M332 leaf springs sling under the axle and on the M105, they ride on top of the axle.
I plan on removing the bed off of the M332 and placing the tank on the frame. I hope to shave off perhaps 600 pounds or more of metal from the M332 so I can put more diesel fuel in the tank. At 8 pounds per gallon, and 500 gallons, with the weight of the aluminum tank, I'll exceed the design limits of the M332, but after looking underneath the trailer, HOLLY COW, they look over-engineered. And I don't plan on moving the trailer around too much, perhaps a yearly trip up the road, when the traffic is non-existent (traffic here is nil anyway.)
Has anyone here on SS actually taken apart an M3322. The bolts underneath the bed where they attach to the frame look fairly easy to get to with a wrench, but I have the cutting torch ready just in case the years of paint is too tough to "wrench" through.
I also plan on modifying my other M332 and converting it into a motorcycle hauler. I've been toying with the idea of buying a 2012 Royal Enfield Military OD Green C5 http://www.racewayservices.com/raceway/images/enfield/bullet_g5_military_efi_lg.jpg , and keeping the M332 OD. Should look pretty cool when I haul the combo to about 50 miles south of Sturgis and sneak in... (OK, I'm an old worn out fart and no way in the world can my aikey-breaky body ride a motorcycle from Texas to darned near Canada and back...
I am about to plunder, pillage and ravage my most recent acquisition... my really cool looking M332 trailer...
I originally bought an M105 to use for hauling an aluminum 600 gallon fuel tank I plan to use on my farms for hauling and storing diesel fuel. As I thought about this (after I won the bid on one of those surplus 600 gallon tanks at Red River Army Depot) I looked at my new tank when I got it home and "chickened-out" and decided the tank would sit up too darned high in the M105, making it prone to tipping over and lunging forward if I had to do a quick stop. All that heavy fuel at that "altitude" on an M105 got me nervous, even though I'd probably go into town twice a year for filling, and most of the time the trailer/tank would sit in a shed.
I found a couple of M332 trailers and saw that they have a lower center of gravity, When I got my M332's home, I parked one next to my M105 and saw that the M332 leaf springs sling under the axle and on the M105, they ride on top of the axle.
I plan on removing the bed off of the M332 and placing the tank on the frame. I hope to shave off perhaps 600 pounds or more of metal from the M332 so I can put more diesel fuel in the tank. At 8 pounds per gallon, and 500 gallons, with the weight of the aluminum tank, I'll exceed the design limits of the M332, but after looking underneath the trailer, HOLLY COW, they look over-engineered. And I don't plan on moving the trailer around too much, perhaps a yearly trip up the road, when the traffic is non-existent (traffic here is nil anyway.)
Has anyone here on SS actually taken apart an M3322. The bolts underneath the bed where they attach to the frame look fairly easy to get to with a wrench, but I have the cutting torch ready just in case the years of paint is too tough to "wrench" through.
I also plan on modifying my other M332 and converting it into a motorcycle hauler. I've been toying with the idea of buying a 2012 Royal Enfield Military OD Green C5 http://www.racewayservices.com/raceway/images/enfield/bullet_g5_military_efi_lg.jpg , and keeping the M332 OD. Should look pretty cool when I haul the combo to about 50 miles south of Sturgis and sneak in... (OK, I'm an old worn out fart and no way in the world can my aikey-breaky body ride a motorcycle from Texas to darned near Canada and back...
Attachments
-
60.6 KB Views: 87
Last edited: