It is not my intension to start a pi**ing match about who knows what about what has happened to a surplus truck, but at the risk of getting a bit wordy, I would like to comment on what people assume has been done to their truck before they bought it.
There is no way you can know what has been done to a thirty year old truck. Maintenance performed stateside tends to be a of high quality, principally because of the availability of parts and expendable items and the fact that motor pools stateside usually have the luxury of the time to do it right.
That is not true overseas at the end of a very long and slow supply chain. In a combat zone there is a lot of “Kamikaze Maintenance” done; that’s maintenance performed just to get through the next mission. I have done my share of doing whatever is necessary to get a truck into a convoy and out the front gate.
When we took the dead transmission out, we saved the oil in case we might want to have it tested. After I talked to the Allison engineer we saved the oil from the pull-out transmission I was putting back in the truck. The Allison guy told me that any quality ATF would work fine and he was aware of the government’s practice of using 15W40. The oil out of both transmissions was considerably thicker than the ATF I put in.
My truck has had a lot of bad maintenance such as wrong and missing bolts, missing washers and badly spliced wires. It looked like stuff done to “just get the truck rolling.” The only thing we can do is assess the truck’s current condition and go from there, and don’t be so trusting of government decisions about equipment. If you are interested in reading about that and some of the things Robert S. McNamara did just to get on with the Viet Nam war, go to
http://jouster.com/ and read both parts of the
Saga of the M16.
BTW, the transmission blew on the trip from Ft. Benning, GA to Denver, CO, 16 miles from home. In the GL yard I did check the fluids for level and apparent quality. They barely let me do that and pump up 2 flats.
PS Rest in peace Major Dick Culver, USMC.