I am a safety first person also, but just for the sake of devil\s advocate and pure curiosity.
I am not familiar with the 900 series but to me they always sounded more like a normal road/highway truck than the good old "real
" 5-tons like the M50s and the M800s. Even when in the 1980s in the USA and Canada, I saw Freightliners and Kenworths occasionally doing such speeds. The more modern trucks have formal top speeds mentioned of over 80 mph.
So let's start with a few "if" things. Presumably the M900s have dual air brake system. So IF the guy has tires approved for such speeds and IF the guy is driving in Texas along the 130 or on other highways where such speeds are allowed, and IF he is driving with properly inflated tires and IF he is hauling empty, are there any other mechanical arguments (and see disclaimer below) why a M900 should not drive those speeds while commercial trucks can do so mechanically and legally?????
Disclaimer: there are some situations where driving on endless straight highways with low traffic and good view and road surface, I might eventually agree with rigs driving 80 mph, but only if .., if .., if..., and if ..., (including a very warm place freezing over). On the other hand, the 50 - 55 mph for old MV trucks is appropriate, but for a much more modern truck (less than 20 years) using new (less than 6 year old) tires, it is unrealistic slow and way below the
SAFE mechanical capacity of the vehicle. Beware, I am not talking about the !@#$@#!$ inexperienced driver and if it is advisable to go over that speed with an MV attracting a lot of attention anyway. I am asking a purely mechanical question here.