Jones
Well-known member
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- Sacramento, California
Dave, I've had a 404 and a 416. The 404s are the most common and probably the best buys.
There's a lot of redundancy, some of which can be simplified and/or updated.
If you end up with one look into a few parts that'll make it more fun?!? "High-speed" axles (the fire trucks came with them) will up your road speed some, for off-roading a "crawler box" is a nice addition and they just bolt onto the bottom of the transmission in place of the trans bottom cover, for that daily climb up and into the saddle-- a pair of hub steps are nice additions, insulation for the engine cover will cut down on the cab interior temps, going to an upholstery shop and having a rear top curtain made with a larger rear window will make backing up a breeze after peering through the foggy, postage stamp sized one they come with.
With a number of places selling Unimogs, parts aren't that hard to find; especially if you join one of the Unimog sites where someone always seems to have a few more parts stashed 'out-in-the-workshop'. Typical german over engineering gives you tight tolerances which aren't always a blessing but all in all you'll find the Unimog a fun truck although not necessarily the ideal cross-country rig. If you can, buddy up with someone who has one and get a ride in it to see first-hand what they're like; I guarantee that seeing one parked or tooling around a shopping center parking lot and sitting in one perched on the top of a boulder are two COMPLETELY different experiences.
There's a lot of redundancy, some of which can be simplified and/or updated.
If you end up with one look into a few parts that'll make it more fun?!? "High-speed" axles (the fire trucks came with them) will up your road speed some, for off-roading a "crawler box" is a nice addition and they just bolt onto the bottom of the transmission in place of the trans bottom cover, for that daily climb up and into the saddle-- a pair of hub steps are nice additions, insulation for the engine cover will cut down on the cab interior temps, going to an upholstery shop and having a rear top curtain made with a larger rear window will make backing up a breeze after peering through the foggy, postage stamp sized one they come with.
With a number of places selling Unimogs, parts aren't that hard to find; especially if you join one of the Unimog sites where someone always seems to have a few more parts stashed 'out-in-the-workshop'. Typical german over engineering gives you tight tolerances which aren't always a blessing but all in all you'll find the Unimog a fun truck although not necessarily the ideal cross-country rig. If you can, buddy up with someone who has one and get a ride in it to see first-hand what they're like; I guarantee that seeing one parked or tooling around a shopping center parking lot and sitting in one perched on the top of a boulder are two COMPLETELY different experiences.