Well, I'm excited about the new truck. Its a 1967 M35A2 W/W, hard top, heater, non turbo. All in all mechanically it seems to be in good shape, minus the generator (see below), and I have a constant scraping noise coming from the front brakes. Needless to say one of the first things I'm going to do is pull all the wheels and check out the brakes. Has very little fluid leaks, the only 2 I saw was the transfer case and the PTO. It definitely needs some paint, has a good amount of surface rust but nothing that can't be taken care of. Needs an axle boot, new troop seats, and the drivers seat canvas is shredded.
So a pretty easy going recovery went south about half way home. We stopped at a gas station to take a bathroom break, turned the truck off and did our business. Went out to fire the truck back up and it turned not quite a whole revolution and quit. After that the starter just did the rapid click indicating dead batteries. We fired the truck up 5-6 different times before we left with no problem. I initially thought that the primary power lever had gone bad because it was a little floppy and when turning it the gauges would flutter and if you jiggled the switch they would come back to normal. So I called Mike (SCSG-G4) and he promptly got in his car to bring us another switch. While we were waiting something told me to check the batteries, so we pulled up our chase car and put some jumper cables on to see if giving it a little juice would help any. It got the starter to give us about 3/4 of a revolution out of the engine. Mike showed up a little bit later with the new switch, which wasn't the issue.
During all this I remembered that when I was checking the member map before our trip (which has been an EXTREMELY useful tool) I saw on there that wilfreeman lived close by. So I sent him a PM and he said he would head up there when he got off work. It turns out we broke down about 4 miles from his house (talk about convenient). In the mean time he called his buddy Matt (I think he said he's on the forum, not sure what his username is though) and he came up there about 20 minutes later so we were able to get 2 sets of jumper cables on the batteries in hopes the would get it started. After letting it charge for a while we tried to fire it up with no luck. At that point we decided to use Matt's truck to pull the Deuce up the hill we were at and then move around to the front of the truck to pull it down and pop the clutch. We did that and got it fired up finally. Luckily Matt is a diesel mechanic and had a multimeter and an amp clamp. We checked the generator and it was only putting out about 6 amps.
It was dark by this point, and thinking we had enough power to run the headlights to get home, we jumped in and pulled out of the gas station to head home. We made a U turn, got about 1 block down the road and the headlights got VERY bright, went blue, and then went out. So we had to pull over AGAIN, luckily we hadn't made it back on the interstate yet. I called the other Matt (wilfreeman) and he said we could follow him to his house and leave the truck there until we can get back down with some batteries to get her started and back home in daylight.
Another member on here, Thane (tstates), lives about 5 minutes from our house and I was telling him about the whole ordeal and it turns out he has 2 good batteries he's going to let me borrow to take down and get the truck fired up.
All in all, it wasn't the worst thing that could have happened, but it was still nerve racking. We're finally back home, I'm having a beer (or 6), and we're not stranded on the side of the road.
I would like to give a huge thanks to Mike (SCSG-G4), Matt (wilfreeman), Thane (tstates) and the other Matt for all their help in this endeavor. This is one of the many reasons I have come to absolutely love this forum over the past several months. The willingness of the guys on here to drop what they're doing and help someone out blows my mind.
Now for a few pictures seeing how my wife decided to snap some: