Tplane37
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- Dallas, Texas
After 20+ years of day-dreaming, I finally got her. I have wanted an old deuce since I was about 10 years old, and then my other half came to me last week and said, "we need a dump truck for the farm, you need to find one." And that was all the excuse I needed! I got lucky and found this ol' girl 17 miles from the farm.
Top end has been completely rebuilt in the past year with a new head, valves, seats, plugs, sealed wires, rebuilt carb, new exhaust, and all the gaskets replaced when the head was replaced (of course). High Range-Reverse literally has a bolt preventing anyone from intentionally or unintentionally kicking this girl in her Achilles Heel. Mechanically, all this truck needs is the steel hydraulic brake lines replaced and she is road-worthy! The body, well that's another story.
The body is solid for the most part, I found one spot of rust about the size of a dollar bill on the floor pan in front of the driver's seat. There is some rust-through on the fender lips.
And in looking at the pictures, yes, I did use my car trailer as a dolly... the 211 was to long to pull all the way on, not to mention to heavy! I pulled both rear drive shafts and kept her under 15 MPH for the 17 mile trip... took over 2 hours to get home.
My other half has already named her "Tonka" because she's a yellow dump truck and she says I am acting like a five year old with a new Tonka Truck (so no relation to Jatonka... just coincidence). The Silverado pulling her did extremely well, even in stopping (better than I thought she would). The Silverado's name is Tiny... and she has a story all her own as well... perhaps another time.
I originally thought this truck was a M-215 because of being a dump truck, but when I scraped the paint off the data plate, it says "XM 211 Cargo" on it. What is the "X" in "XM" and is this an original dump truck, or an after thought? Who can tell me something about Tonka?? (I am browsing the forums too).
EDIT: Spelling and grammar corrections. -Tplane37
Top end has been completely rebuilt in the past year with a new head, valves, seats, plugs, sealed wires, rebuilt carb, new exhaust, and all the gaskets replaced when the head was replaced (of course). High Range-Reverse literally has a bolt preventing anyone from intentionally or unintentionally kicking this girl in her Achilles Heel. Mechanically, all this truck needs is the steel hydraulic brake lines replaced and she is road-worthy! The body, well that's another story.
The body is solid for the most part, I found one spot of rust about the size of a dollar bill on the floor pan in front of the driver's seat. There is some rust-through on the fender lips.
And in looking at the pictures, yes, I did use my car trailer as a dolly... the 211 was to long to pull all the way on, not to mention to heavy! I pulled both rear drive shafts and kept her under 15 MPH for the 17 mile trip... took over 2 hours to get home.
My other half has already named her "Tonka" because she's a yellow dump truck and she says I am acting like a five year old with a new Tonka Truck (so no relation to Jatonka... just coincidence). The Silverado pulling her did extremely well, even in stopping (better than I thought she would). The Silverado's name is Tiny... and she has a story all her own as well... perhaps another time.
I originally thought this truck was a M-215 because of being a dump truck, but when I scraped the paint off the data plate, it says "XM 211 Cargo" on it. What is the "X" in "XM" and is this an original dump truck, or an after thought? Who can tell me something about Tonka?? (I am browsing the forums too).
EDIT: Spelling and grammar corrections. -Tplane37
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