I figured I needed the ground harness for my 1123 when I first got it (based on so many posts saying it's needed), but then I did some research on how it's designed. At least for my 1123, the harness was just duplicating the factory grounds, so it seemed pointless to me and potentially problematic. Maybe the earlier trucks had a more troublesome harness or grounding points. Not only did I see the aftermarket ground harness as unneccessary, but I think some aspects of it are poorly executed and potentially dangerous. I believe the ground harness includes a small guage "ground" wire for both the starter and the generator even though both of these components are both grounded to the block and also have very beefy dedicated negative/ground cables. If for some reason the factory ground path on either of these components failed completely (doubtful, but possible), you'd be asking the very small wire in the aftermarket ground harness to carry way more amps than the wire is rated for. It's poor electrical design to have your ground/negative path "smaller" than your positive since they both have to carry the same amps. Beyond the wire size issue on those 2 big circuits, it's also generally bad practice to provide multiple parallel ground/negative paths. You really want a single "tree" structure where multiple grounds might feed into larger ones and eventually back to the battery, but paths should be minimized when possible. If you allow multiple "parallel" paths, you are prone to creating ground loop situations. I doubt a ground loop is going to do any harm to the crude electronics on a hmmwv, but can certainly cause interference if you are running a radio or anything with sensitive electronics.