August 29th, 2008.
Dear Mike:
Touchy, Touchy.... I CAN guarantee your mighty mite will go places no mog can do unless your carrying a very big honkin chainsaw with you..... I do believe the mighty might is much narrower, much shorter, much more stable with the four wheel independent suspension (the shot of you in that hole almost turned over in the drivers side defines pucker factor for me), and at least in the east..... I could always find some rocks when I needed to climb over a tree too big..... BUT generally I found a way around it....
I've driven both, and a fifty HP mighty mite has it uses (particularly when gas is $$$$$$ high), no, it doesn't have the ground clearance a Unimog does..... But a Unimog can't be picked up with a chopper little larger then a loach.....a Mighty Mite can..... who needs to climb over them when you can fly over them???
My experience with the Mite was that it could ascend a 45 degree slope diagonally, with two diagonally opposite tires in the air if it had the momentum to cross that spot and engage at least 3 wheels on the ground.... AND NO Unimog ever claimed to be able to run on three wheels only for any distance... I did that frequently when busting a front hub bolt. And the mighty mite manual says it can't be done, but with a jack, a chain and some weight in the back, she will do it slowly and carefully. Plus Mites don't have those big honkin solid axles to encumber them....
All jests aside, Mike, I just paid a repair bill on my S.404.114 to correct a bad fuel and electrical system problem that could've bought me two deuces from GL and TWO mites when I bought mine back in 1977!!! The Unimogs have their points, but they aren't 1/4 reconoissance trucks and they aren't deuces.... and with the exchange rate, I don't see Unimogs getting any cheaper. My S.404.114's greatest liability at present is that I will have to find a skilled canvas worker to make a new cab paulin and cargo tarpauling....given the userous rates that some of the German AND stateside dealers want for them...... THE OTHER weak point is that cursed throwout bearing.... I can think of only a couple of other designs as boneheaded as that , given the items size, inaccessability and inability to be relubed except by hand.....Only a MB engineer could design something like that....
Thumbs Up.... and don't let 4 Marines catch you, or they could pick her up by the corner hooks and carry you and it back to the Corps..... Be careful, be safe, and Go Mites...OUAH RAH!
Regards,
Kyle F. McGrogan
N.B. Besides, that bridge plate musta increased your mite's weight by what, 5 lbs???
The M422A1 will run on three wheels, but you should chain the offending hub arm up to the frame and counterbalance with weight on the side that has the two wheels on it left(looking from either the left or right side). Since I usually had front hub bolts fail, the weight went on the opposite side rear and was usually a couple of sincrete blocks. If you get to the Mountain in West Virginia, you will find that few vehicles wider then a mite can go anywhere off road without a chainsaw. and yes, I could always find enough rocks or logs to make a ramp on either side of a downed tree, if I couldn't get around it for some reason. The Unimog does have ground clearance, but it's not as agile and it wont fit or turn where a M422A1 will. trust me on that one!