Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!
Bolt-together rims that keep the tire from falling off if it goes flat.What are "Combat Rims"?
The 6966th still is active here in Germany.6966th Labor Service Transportation Truck Battalion.
Germany in 1953.
nice catch! I had to go back for a re-lookMmm with combat rims! Thanks for posting
correct, sits lower .. same situation as with the M49C (obvious wheel wells) versus the M49A1-A2C tank bodies (straight-line above tires). .. I have not seen a straight M50 thus I cannot comment about the height of that bodylooks like the M34 had a completely different bed too, not just the wheel wells. See how the front of the bed doesn't slope upward? The M35 bed sits higher I think, and that was with the smaller diameter dual wheels
Yeah I think GMC dug into the archives for that design that they applied to the new Sierra pickups. The super early hydramatic GMCs had that tailgate as well.wow , very interesting tailgate / step seen in posting #10
What's the diameter on those tires?
- M34: cargo truck with six 11.00-20 tires
- M35: cargo truck with ten 9.00-20 tires
They're just a hair bigger in diameter than 365/80R20 tires.
- M34: cargo truck with six 11.00-20 tires
- M35: cargo truck with ten 9.00-20 tires
my favorite a quad 50 on a halftrack!original combat rims.
My speculation: the M34s were the absolute first trucks to roll off the assembly line in 1950. Soon thereafter, the design was switched to the M35. The very early nature of the M34, plus low production numbers, plus heavy use by the Army resulted in them being “used up” and didn’t have much of an afterlife with civil defense, fire, municipal, etc.Where did all the M34s go? Were they all converted to M35s or just scrapped? I don't think I've ever seen one in person. I've seen M135s and M211s though.