stanzuray
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For what it'll be used for a large track vehicle would be better as the drifting on the road gets very deep. I figure 6 chained up drive tires will get through anything a truck can get struck in as long as the drifting is not to active. Also we can't use the road till the Yukon river gets thick enough to support whatever we want to put on it. This 2 1/2 ton will be lighter that the 5 ton so that will be a plus at getting across the river earlier. Alot of it is using what we have also. As to the 5 ton I used to use, a diesel mechanic did give me some help troubleshooting it and said he'd bet money it was abused and compression was gone the way it would not fire at all even with start fluid and new batteries turning it over real fast but any hints on that would be appreciated. I was given some info about the way it was raced around by multiple drivers. I was given control over this deuce so that will never happen now.If you're using it to pull out other's pick-ups, the M35A3 would probably be fine for that. The truck alone weighs nearly two times more than the typical pick-up, so I'd think low-gear rescues like that shouldn't be a problem.
The problems I see associated with deuces and this kind of work is when people decide it's a good idea to use it to do work that's better done with a 5-ton, like carrying big water tanks for brush fire fighting, or pulling loaded commercial trucks out of the ditch. This is even moreso important with the A3 because of its deratings. That's why I like the idea of 5-tons so much; they will do pretty much everything you ask it to and still be within data plate capacities.
Regardless of the truck, however, use the truck within spec and properly maintain it and it will last awhile and remain safe to operate.
Speaking of the 5-ton, do you know the model of the one you described as inoperable? There's probably a thread somewhere on this forum where someone had the same problem and solved it.
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