July 2nd, 2010.
Permit me to weigh in on this too. Back when the deuce was designed (as a gasoline engined truck -1948, it was not uncommon for one drive axle road tractors (civillian) to make do with a 115 HP gasoline or diesel engine pulling a 28 foot trailer and doing maybe 45-50 on the road. They often used two speed rear ends and 4 to 10 separate gears to get you up to road speed in a half mile to a mile, or so. The deuce, being an off road designed truck, do not need either complexity or power, as either misapplied in the hands of an 18 or 20 year old G.I., can lead to problems. Plus, the deuce is a long stroke diesel with fairly heavy (by modern standards) and relatively imperfectly balanced rotating loads... Many a G.I. (and I suspect a few members on here), have found out what happens when you push a Multifuel over the red line, and from all accounts, the results are memorable.....
The (1963) S.404.114 Unimog I have, has heavier axle gearing (7.65 to 1) and the usual 6 speed transmission, and it makes do with a 80HP Mercedes gas engine of about 134 CID pulling a 6100# tare and 9100# loaded truck, and no one has ever accused the Unimog of being lightening fast, but it has gone places few civillian trucks can crawl into or out of loaded, and it will pull the bumper off of most civillian trucks.... There are quite a few S404.114's surviving, much like the deuce, they were designed as working trucks (or tractors, in the case of the Unimog), to be simple, robust and long lived. Apparently even Mercedes miscalculated the longevities for the S404.114's.. as the last one was built in 1981!
With care, a deuce might well outlast its owner, with unmitigated abuse, pretty unlikely (and the owner may not outlast the deuce, depending on what stupid move he made last with it....)! Few civillian trucks from 1971 are seen on the road today working like my deuce does, 98+% of the time, when called on it works. The suspension, though crude, is robust and flexible, going places that would stick or break a comparable sized civillian truck... So, my hats are off to the REO engineers 62 years later....
It's just an opinion, but one can get banjo music outta of a jug (according to Briscoe Darling), and the deuce is pretty good at making music....