saddamsnightmare
Well-known member
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- Location
- Abilene, Texas
February 2nd, 2008.
I will report back whatever I can find out from Memphis Equipment (and/or Boyce and/or Eastern Surplus)on the components, and prices if available as kits, also what they would charge to convert the vehicle on site (theirs) as no doubt their mechanics have done it before. I'm leaning to all new brake lines and hoses, and possibly wheel cylinders, even though this truck is only 22,000 out from the MWO rebuild, its still 18 or 19 years out of its last major shopping and starting to show it. I'm only 362 miles from Memphis, and if the Deuce feels up to it, I should be able to make it in just under 10 hours (no failures or screwups enroute), should they come up with an installed price that I can live with. Restoration is one thing, but when you think about it, sooner or later almost everything on these trucks is going to be repaired or replaced, and at some point they will no longer be the 1971 M35A2 or whatever, just a facsimile of it.
I'm seeing this at one trolley museum I work at, where so far about 50-75% of the structure below the belt rails under the windows, about 80% of the woodwork, and about 90% of the wiring has been replaced due to wear, rust, salt damage and poor maintenance over the last operational years (1941-1957) by Pittsburgh Railways Co., so sooner or later 4398
isn't going to be the 1917 car it started out to be. But, for the car to survive and be a viable running car, these repairs must be made, so it will be with our trucks.
Thanks again,
Sincerely,
Kyle F. McGrogan
1963 Mercedes Benz S404.114 Unimog (Swiss)
1971 Kaiser Jeep M35A2 Wo/W "Saddam's Nightmare" Vietnam and Desert Storm Veteran Deuce and a Half.
I will report back whatever I can find out from Memphis Equipment (and/or Boyce and/or Eastern Surplus)on the components, and prices if available as kits, also what they would charge to convert the vehicle on site (theirs) as no doubt their mechanics have done it before. I'm leaning to all new brake lines and hoses, and possibly wheel cylinders, even though this truck is only 22,000 out from the MWO rebuild, its still 18 or 19 years out of its last major shopping and starting to show it. I'm only 362 miles from Memphis, and if the Deuce feels up to it, I should be able to make it in just under 10 hours (no failures or screwups enroute), should they come up with an installed price that I can live with. Restoration is one thing, but when you think about it, sooner or later almost everything on these trucks is going to be repaired or replaced, and at some point they will no longer be the 1971 M35A2 or whatever, just a facsimile of it.
I'm seeing this at one trolley museum I work at, where so far about 50-75% of the structure below the belt rails under the windows, about 80% of the woodwork, and about 90% of the wiring has been replaced due to wear, rust, salt damage and poor maintenance over the last operational years (1941-1957) by Pittsburgh Railways Co., so sooner or later 4398
isn't going to be the 1917 car it started out to be. But, for the car to survive and be a viable running car, these repairs must be made, so it will be with our trucks.
Thanks again,
Sincerely,
Kyle F. McGrogan
1963 Mercedes Benz S404.114 Unimog (Swiss)
1971 Kaiser Jeep M35A2 Wo/W "Saddam's Nightmare" Vietnam and Desert Storm Veteran Deuce and a Half.