Thanks! I'm aware of this, so I have only driven it 2km so far and very slowly. I will check the spindle nuts, half shaft bolts and change the oils before driving it again. The humvee is now in my garage, so I'm able to work on it.Hello Jan,
welcome to the madness, from me too ! Good to hear that you bought from Thijs; you´re in pretty good hands then. He knows what he´s doing.
Despite that, I´d check the wheel spindle nuts before driving any more. There have been cases of spindle nuts not being secured, and the whole wheel rolling away during driving. Not as funny as it sounds. Yes, checking the nuts is a day of work (including all the resealing, etc.), but you´ll sleep better afterwards.
I also recommend to check the bolts connecting the halfshafts to the diffs. Those bolts have a tendency to work themselves out, and then damage the brake calipers.
Interesting to hear about required changes in Finland. Down here, we also need to change a few things (mostly lights), but the mad thing is that it all depends on the mood of the check engineer. So we have Humvees with legal red rear flashers, but most converted to yellow. Some have legal red rear side markers, but most converted to yellow. And the holy grail is the brushguard, which was completely verboten by some EU law in the 2000s, yet some check engineers regard this as an important historical part, so on some Humvees here brushguards are legalized. It´s completely confusing, especially for law enforcement.
We have the same requirement for lights here as in Germany. Everything is inspected annually and the inspectors are quite strict. Red flashers are allowed, but I had to remove the red side markers. Brushguards are legal on terrain vehicles and my humvee will be in class N1G.