Rattlehead
Member
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- Michigan
You're thinking like I often do, trying to kill 2 birds with one stone (in this case, getting a cool offroad truck AND avoiding rental fees). Sometimes this works out for me, sometimes it gets me in hip deep!
One thing to consider, do you have the mechanical aptitude to maintain this 35+ year old beast once you get it back? Or are you willing to learn? Do you have the space to keep it and work on it at your new place? Any B.S. zoning laws at your new residence that they can harass you with for parking a "big ugly truck" in your driveway?
As far as tools, you can do most any of the work on these with a normal tool set, up to 1/2" drive, except for the wheel lugs which you will appreciate a 3/4" drive impact and the appropriate sockets. This may be something that you want to have available for the trip, in case of flat tires. Also a good heavy bottle jack. The mil spec one is 8 ton, which I think is marginally small on the base size. Wood cribbing too, so you don't run out of jack reach before you get it off the ground.
Driving a deuce on highways is actually not that stressful if you have faith in it. The main reason is that you are going so much slower than the rest of traffic that you don't really have to worry about that rubbernecking you get in congestion. Other vehicles whiz past you and, in no time, are many car lengths ahead of you, plus you can see over the top of the cars and pickups to see what's coming up, have time to react. As others mentioned though, it is physically tiring, especially in the summer. Lots of air leaks in the cab, major heat radiating through the metal floors and firewall, lots of engine/gear/road noise, dehydration from sweating and wind, etc. I would say that 500 miles in a deuce is equivalent to 8-900 in a passenger car, so plan accordingly. Which brings up the point, where will you stay/sleep during your trip? Added hotel bills? The van box (M109) might keep your stuff more secure, but it also limits your off road access in tight trails, not that a deuce fits through a lot of places anyways.
One thing to consider, do you have the mechanical aptitude to maintain this 35+ year old beast once you get it back? Or are you willing to learn? Do you have the space to keep it and work on it at your new place? Any B.S. zoning laws at your new residence that they can harass you with for parking a "big ugly truck" in your driveway?
As far as tools, you can do most any of the work on these with a normal tool set, up to 1/2" drive, except for the wheel lugs which you will appreciate a 3/4" drive impact and the appropriate sockets. This may be something that you want to have available for the trip, in case of flat tires. Also a good heavy bottle jack. The mil spec one is 8 ton, which I think is marginally small on the base size. Wood cribbing too, so you don't run out of jack reach before you get it off the ground.
Driving a deuce on highways is actually not that stressful if you have faith in it. The main reason is that you are going so much slower than the rest of traffic that you don't really have to worry about that rubbernecking you get in congestion. Other vehicles whiz past you and, in no time, are many car lengths ahead of you, plus you can see over the top of the cars and pickups to see what's coming up, have time to react. As others mentioned though, it is physically tiring, especially in the summer. Lots of air leaks in the cab, major heat radiating through the metal floors and firewall, lots of engine/gear/road noise, dehydration from sweating and wind, etc. I would say that 500 miles in a deuce is equivalent to 8-900 in a passenger car, so plan accordingly. Which brings up the point, where will you stay/sleep during your trip? Added hotel bills? The van box (M109) might keep your stuff more secure, but it also limits your off road access in tight trails, not that a deuce fits through a lot of places anyways.