jonstine
New member
- 29
- 0
- 0
- Location
- Austin, TX
Greetings, fellow CUCV owners. I just bought a 1986 M1028 with 39k mi on it. I've driven them in the Marine Corps before, but this is my first time owning one.
Paint and body are not in the best shape, and I will need to replace the wheels/tires pretty soon. Outside of normal age related issues, the truck appears to be in pretty sound mechanical condition. The first thing I did on a test drive was put it in 4L and point it up the steep, rocky hill behind the seller's house. Color me impressed. After coming back down, I put it back in 2H, unlocked the hubs (absolutely no friction), and drove it into town. Even got on the highway doing about 60 for a few miles. Everything worked great, shifted fine, stopped fine, etc. After I got back to the seller's house, I looked for leaks or seeping from anywhere. Bone dry for the most part, no leaks.
My question to you all is this, what should I do first in order to prep this for daily driving? I'm looking for dependability and long term capabilities first. Maybe in another year or two I'll start looking into upgrades. Everything is pretty stock, 6.2L, TH400, NP208, Dana 60 with L/S, GM 14 bolt with Locker. I believe the seller took care of it, but I'm not sure how frequently service was performed.
should I focus on changing all of the fluids and belts first? Anything to shore up the engine/electrical? It has only 1 original alternator, the BP had it and swapped out the 2nd for AC. It also has 2 yo aftermarket glowplugs.
I'd like to put 35-37" tires on it pretty soon, not only for the appearance, but for the lower RPMs on the freeway. I know this has been asked and answered numerous times on here in numerous ways, but I can't determine if the M1028 varies significantly from the M1008 in regard to tire size applications when stock. The original runs are on it. I'm willing to look at new rims, and have seen some recommend spacers, some not. What's the largest tire I can put on the stock rim at stock height? Mostly highway/city driving, with occasional off-road use.
Im excited to be part of the CUCV owner's group, and I sincerely appreciate any advice or assistance you can offer.
Paint and body are not in the best shape, and I will need to replace the wheels/tires pretty soon. Outside of normal age related issues, the truck appears to be in pretty sound mechanical condition. The first thing I did on a test drive was put it in 4L and point it up the steep, rocky hill behind the seller's house. Color me impressed. After coming back down, I put it back in 2H, unlocked the hubs (absolutely no friction), and drove it into town. Even got on the highway doing about 60 for a few miles. Everything worked great, shifted fine, stopped fine, etc. After I got back to the seller's house, I looked for leaks or seeping from anywhere. Bone dry for the most part, no leaks.
My question to you all is this, what should I do first in order to prep this for daily driving? I'm looking for dependability and long term capabilities first. Maybe in another year or two I'll start looking into upgrades. Everything is pretty stock, 6.2L, TH400, NP208, Dana 60 with L/S, GM 14 bolt with Locker. I believe the seller took care of it, but I'm not sure how frequently service was performed.
should I focus on changing all of the fluids and belts first? Anything to shore up the engine/electrical? It has only 1 original alternator, the BP had it and swapped out the 2nd for AC. It also has 2 yo aftermarket glowplugs.
I'd like to put 35-37" tires on it pretty soon, not only for the appearance, but for the lower RPMs on the freeway. I know this has been asked and answered numerous times on here in numerous ways, but I can't determine if the M1028 varies significantly from the M1008 in regard to tire size applications when stock. The original runs are on it. I'm willing to look at new rims, and have seen some recommend spacers, some not. What's the largest tire I can put on the stock rim at stock height? Mostly highway/city driving, with occasional off-road use.
Im excited to be part of the CUCV owner's group, and I sincerely appreciate any advice or assistance you can offer.