My xm211 has a small block chevy, 4 speed manual, vaccum booster, and hoist from a 70s GM "2 ton" grain truck. The truck has been a back-back burner project that's only been driven around the fields once every several months. That changed this summer.
I rebuilt most wheel cylinders to get some brakes. What a job. I did that to prepare for use during an excavation project. The excavator was to load a tri axle dump truck and while that truck was away the Duece and a grain truck would take up the slack. I thought I wouldn't be hauling very much. Well, the tri axle had to take a longer route and I ended up running the Duece hard and fast, across a creek and through the woods making trips as fast as possible. The truck worked and worked well. The operator put 3 buckets on me (he estimated 34 or 3500 lbs per bucket), and if he loaded me at the rear it dumped fine. Once he had the load spread forward and a backhoe had to unload me.
Oh, did I mention that it was 90 couple degrees and the floorboards were about 200?? No pain, no gain...right?
But the truck did what it was asked and finally earned it's keep.
I rebuilt most wheel cylinders to get some brakes. What a job. I did that to prepare for use during an excavation project. The excavator was to load a tri axle dump truck and while that truck was away the Duece and a grain truck would take up the slack. I thought I wouldn't be hauling very much. Well, the tri axle had to take a longer route and I ended up running the Duece hard and fast, across a creek and through the woods making trips as fast as possible. The truck worked and worked well. The operator put 3 buckets on me (he estimated 34 or 3500 lbs per bucket), and if he loaded me at the rear it dumped fine. Once he had the load spread forward and a backhoe had to unload me.
Oh, did I mention that it was 90 couple degrees and the floorboards were about 200?? No pain, no gain...right?
But the truck did what it was asked and finally earned it's keep.