Oh you must have seen a guard or reserve launch truck ( the term we used for flight line vans) LOL Regular AF launch trucks were used until they could be fitted in to a Volkswagen ash tray,In 1994 we were still driving some trucks purchased in the early 70s, Some dodge models were from the 60s . Most we had in Propulsion flights had in excess of 150 to 200 k , mostly 0 to 40 mph speeds and countless hours of ideling time waiting on aircraft launchs or a troop to finish a job. they ran 24/7 7 days a week for the most part . They were reasonably maintained . not wanting to fan the flames on the cucv issue , AF seldom bought CUCV independently, hence all the Technical Orders for maintenance (ARMY AIR FORCE REPAIR MANUALS have both services listed if we were joint users, If the manual only listed AF it was because Army wasn't a user. All most all of our TACTICAL VEHICAL purchases were completed thru the ARMY Automotive or tank command , they were the prime contractors, we sometimes bought on the tail of the purchase, or in the case of joint assigned units we simply DREW our trucks from the Army motorpool as part of the "Memorandum of Understanding" for vehicles that delineated our mission. The AF purchased "civilian " vehicals in larger numbers for our SUPPLY ( logistics) units directly , Although it was by no means a positive One writer is basicly correct, Our tactical, army purchased , vehicals did come equipped with slave ports , our civilian AF sourced trucks generally did not . We had no use for slave ports, User level personnel wouldn't have jumped a truck anyway, That was a vehical maintainence function .We had very FEW tactical trucks Our focus was / is / aircraft and those vehicals that support aviation operations