KaiserM109
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- SE Aurora, CO
just don't get personal.
I bought an M109 deuce about 6 years ago with the idea of making a backwoods camper out of it. Many things have transpired to keep that from happening, primarily the fact that a non-turbo multi-fuel deuce can hardly pull its own hat off at high altitude, much less haul all my junk around and pull a trailer. I also bought an MKT-85.
I bought an M923A1 almost 4 years ago sight-unseen and drove it home (long, unrelated story). I had no Idea it was so big until the day I stood next to it in the Ft. Benning GL yard, but I overcame several obstacles, including a trashed transmission, and it is now sitting, functional, in a storage yard north of Denver.
Enough history. I am planning to put the M109’s box on the back, relocate the spare to snug the box up to the cab and get its center over the intermediate axle and relocate the exhaust all the way to the back.
Because it has a TERRIBLE turning radius I have 2 things in mind for it:
1. Bob it.
2. Give it Quad Steering.
There are some switch backs that the truck currently could not handle, particularly towing a trailer. General Motors offered Quad Steering on Suburbans and pickups for a while around 2005, so it’s at least somewhat practical. Monster trucks also implement Quad Steering. It would be for use no faster than 10 MPH, so the controls don’t need to be really precise. I would need some sort of controls, probably hydraulic.
I have studied the front axle on my M923 and have identified a few problems.
1. Hydraulic controls implies a hydraulic pump. I don’t think it would be a good idea to try to run both steering boxes from the original pump.
2. Brakes!! The back brakes have 2 actuators on each wheel with an emergency spring. The front has only one actuator w/o the emergency spring.
3. The ABS sensor is on the left intermediate wheel.
I don’t have a solution for the need of more hydraulic volume. For the brake and ABS problem, I think the best solution might be to somehow mount the backing plates from one of the throw-away rear axles on the new, formerly front axle.
Has anyone else thought about this or maybe even tried it?
I bought an M109 deuce about 6 years ago with the idea of making a backwoods camper out of it. Many things have transpired to keep that from happening, primarily the fact that a non-turbo multi-fuel deuce can hardly pull its own hat off at high altitude, much less haul all my junk around and pull a trailer. I also bought an MKT-85.
I bought an M923A1 almost 4 years ago sight-unseen and drove it home (long, unrelated story). I had no Idea it was so big until the day I stood next to it in the Ft. Benning GL yard, but I overcame several obstacles, including a trashed transmission, and it is now sitting, functional, in a storage yard north of Denver.
Enough history. I am planning to put the M109’s box on the back, relocate the spare to snug the box up to the cab and get its center over the intermediate axle and relocate the exhaust all the way to the back.
Because it has a TERRIBLE turning radius I have 2 things in mind for it:
1. Bob it.
2. Give it Quad Steering.
There are some switch backs that the truck currently could not handle, particularly towing a trailer. General Motors offered Quad Steering on Suburbans and pickups for a while around 2005, so it’s at least somewhat practical. Monster trucks also implement Quad Steering. It would be for use no faster than 10 MPH, so the controls don’t need to be really precise. I would need some sort of controls, probably hydraulic.
I have studied the front axle on my M923 and have identified a few problems.
1. Hydraulic controls implies a hydraulic pump. I don’t think it would be a good idea to try to run both steering boxes from the original pump.
2. Brakes!! The back brakes have 2 actuators on each wheel with an emergency spring. The front has only one actuator w/o the emergency spring.
3. The ABS sensor is on the left intermediate wheel.
I don’t have a solution for the need of more hydraulic volume. For the brake and ABS problem, I think the best solution might be to somehow mount the backing plates from one of the throw-away rear axles on the new, formerly front axle.
Has anyone else thought about this or maybe even tried it?