are you kidding the Ural and Zil wrote the book on battlefield reliability. They are still driving them everyday in afganistan that were left over from the occupation in the 80's. The entire truck was designed to be driven through russian swamps and snow by conscript army privates. Ive never heard aanyone call them unreliable. Have you ever driven one?
David,
with all do respect,
you have wrong information.
Q: are you kidding
A: Nop
YOU: the Ural and Zil wrote the book on battlefield reliability.
ME: Ther is no such a book. However, if it is exist, Ural and Zil wrote book about Cat, Cummins, Alison, Rockwell etc. Whey had time to write this book (if any) because whey were in garage.
YOU: They are still driving them everyday in afganistan that were left over from the occupation in the 80's.
ME: possibly. Have you look at odometer? Have you look at service record? Do you know it is very common to change head gasket at 30,000 miles and rebuild engine on 50-70,000 miles? When you get brand spanking new truck you need to put into garage and go through ALL bolts to tight them up to the torque. And redo again after 1,000 miles. Including head bolts. Every other oil change you need to adjust all wheel bearings. I can go on and on.
YOU: The entire truck was designed to be driven through russian swamps and snow by conscript army privates.
ME: I am not arguing about design. Design is good. implementation is bad. Still is bad. Tolerance is bad. Oils, filters, lubricants are bad. Wires are bad. Switches are bad. List is big. Design is very good. Very simple, very few thinks to brake. I like design.
YOU: Ive never heard aanyone call them unreliable.
ME: Very few people have them who can communicate with you. And who is on this forum are collectors. Ask owners of Zil or Ural how many miles they drove. How much load. My 1994 International 4700 has 375,000 miles, another GMC T6500 260,000 miles. David, If you see stars on the side of some Russians trucks it means 100,000 Km (50,000 miles) with out total rebuild. maximum I'v seen 3 stars total.
YOU: Have you ever driven one?
ME: I have extensive practice and knowledge of this trucks. Yes. I Have driven too many. I learned to drive on Zil 137 in 1984. Learned mechanical trade on ZIL, GAZ, Ural, MAZ, KrAZ. Learned later in my life Tatra, Shkoda and KamAZ. I actually was teaching people for 1.5 year how to drive and repair this and many other equipment.
I can put parallel to 1986-90 Jaguar XJ6. Nice car, exotic, drives awesome. If it's working.
Russian truck for collectors - could be. For job to do - think twice.