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M 817 dump bed on a Deuce

Floridianson

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Have a friend that would like to put a 817 dump bed on a Deuce so has anyone done this or know the problems. I know the pto is not going to work as is or wrong side The control linkage will have to be thought up. I did have a M817 that had a pto and and pump in one unit and a plate modified that bolted up to where the stock pump went. I should have took pics of the plate and the whole set up as it was done right from the Military. Thanks
 

KsM715

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St George Ks
It's been done. There is a guy not to far from me that did it. (I have posted pics). Instead of messing with a PTO he mounted a small gas engine in the spare tire space behind the cab to run a small hydraulic pump.


0317121513.jpg0317121513a.jpgThe gas motor is in the little boxbehind the cab
 
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Floridianson

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Thanks that is a good idea on the poney motor. The Deuce frame rails are 11' 4" and the bed 12' The 5 ton 817 frame rails are 9' 4" and bed is 10' 5'' so it will fit.
 

abh3

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Florala, Al
Did it and it's worked for me for years. Used the hard to find rear output PTO and moved the stock dump-bed pump over to the left hand side by fabbing some plates that took hydraulic hoses and hung the pump on the frame. The M35 frame had to be shortened a bit so the dump bed could do it's vertical dump thing, really handy w clay, wet stuff, etc... Yes, the 5 ton bed is heavy but it's also tough. never a bad thing for a woodland dump truck. My avatar is a pic of this very rig...

Seven or eight years later the only problem has been the stock rear springs have sagged a bit but not enough to create an issue. If I had any get up and go anymore I'd rebuild the spring packs and add a few leafs, have new U-bolts bent up, etc... I've learned that tired and dry-rotted dog-bones will cause you some grief in off-road dump truck operations with lots of suspension travel. The stock tires have little sidewall strength so be careful around rocks and debris, I put a lot of dolomite into wet areas for access roads, it doesn't take much of a chunk left on the approach to ruin a tire when loaded. When in the woods I tend to stay in low-range but I use the transfer case range to get going otherwise, starting in low range & then shifting TC up and dropping back on the trans kinda like a semi.
And when you get stuck USE THE BLOCK WHEN WINCHING!!! :deadhorse:
 
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