One thing I have gleaned from studying armored trucks in Vietnam, and then Iraq, was that the Vietnam trucks seemed well-designed. They came as kits, and the guys who ran those trucks built them well. The recent Iraq trucks looked like they were assembled with whatever scrap metal they could find laying around, or cut off of other things. I'm not saying that the trucks weren't well-armored or didn't work well with their hodge-podge of steel plates, just saying that the Iraq-based trucks looked, well, homemade, while the Vietnam ones looked a bit more professional.
With that being said, maybe you should make your tribute truck to reflect that - have rusty plates of metal instead of nicely painted ones. Have weird cutouts in places that don't make sense showing the possibility of that armor plate being used previously somewhere else.
Here's one I always kinda liked - a M915 tractor converted to gun truck. First pic is the real thing in 2003, second is a model of same. Notice the design, very "field mod" look to it. It worked for its purpose, but it didn't win any beauty contests.
I was hoping that Driver523 "Larry" would chime in on this but I can certinly shed some light on what was said above.
"Yes" their was a kit in Vietnam but this "Kit" was not designed to make a Gun Truck. A kit was developed to protect troops in trucks from small arms fire. That is ALL it was ever developed to do!! Ever since then, I believe ALL Military Trucks are developed with a Up armored kit.
Now in Vietnam, this kit was used as a BASIS to START a gun truck!! Not every gun truck built USED THIS KIT. I can tell you that for all these years spent looking at pics, each one of these trucks is different in its own way. It was all done by builder and crew preference. Some drivers wanted windshield armor, others did not. They used what they could find and they did it well as it was their ass in the gun box. Some had more guns, others had less, some had one style of gun mounts, others had pipe welded to steel, you talk about hap hazzard designs, Vietnam Gun Trucks were it. The difference here is PRIDE!! These guys were a crew and they ate, slept, fought, smoked and drank together!!!
Now I have not done Squat on any research on later Iraq Gun Trucks but if you look at the 815th and the Gun Truck Platoon. They had "THE KIT" Built STRICTLY TO BE A GUN TRUCK..............Information gathered from ACTUAL VIETNAM GUN TRUCK crews.
Some of the pics that you see in Iraq of rusty steel slapped into form a box, well different times but the same method was used 40 yrs ago. Why nobody painted them in iraq, I cant say as I have not done that reasearch. But to say that the Vietnam Gun Trucks had a advantage and looked more professional, I would not go out on a limb to say that. You got to look at the fact that it needed to be functional and last.
It was a very hard and expensive lesson they learned. The same RPG is used in both wars but todays Gun Trucks have had excellent survivability then the early trucks of Vietnam. The soldiers in Iraq got to finally benefit from that from their Lessons. What is truly sad is that we had to have a reminder in the beginning of the Iraq war, since no box got developed until the need rose once again but if we had not forgotten maybe Jessica Lynch would have her fellow soldiers with us today.