February 24th., 2008.
Gentlemen:
I concur with Dan Martin and Bottleworks above. The Rockwell Top Loader axle is almost nothing like a modern highway truck axle, as it was designed with WWII experience and technology (mettallurgy, lubrication and engineering limitations) in it's basic design. In some ways it's a much tougher axle unit then a lot of the newer units out there today, but without a major reengineering and redesign, you may well be risking the lives of others and yourself on a possible axle failure.
Most of us seem to forget that the Deuce was designed for about 80% off road, low speed, bad terrain loaded operation, and about 20% highway speed (30-45 MPH) operation (most civillian trucks designed in 1949-1951 couldn't do much over 45 on level ground with a load on the road (normal road speeds for that time)), so the deuce is unexceptional that way.
BUT MOST MODERN CUCV trucks are designed for about 10-20% off road work at relatively light loads and easy terrain conditions, the rest of the time they're intended for road speed operation on PAVED roads. A very close cousin to the Deuce in design and intended useage are the S ad U series UNIMOGS, and they suffer the same low speed nature and design limitations, BUT they'll go where even an HMMWV can't go.
Just my
, but this is reminiscent of the guy a month or so back that just wanted his deuce to do 70 on the road- It ain' going to happen with the original axles, brakes, tires, and stability factored in.
Regards,
Kyle F. McGrogan
1963 Mercedes Benz S404.114 Unimog (Swiss) Army race truck, can do 61 MPH!
1971 Kaiser Jeep M35A2 Wo/W "Saddam's Nightmare" Vietnam and Desert Storm Veteran Deuce Truck, had it's day at the Iraqi "Highway of Death" 150 in 1991.