saddamsnightmare
Well-known member
- 3,618
- 80
- 48
- Location
- Abilene, Texas
January 30th, 2008.
SEE ARTICLE ON M105 LOADOUT BELOW:
In regards to the M35 series not having a split brake system on the air over hydraulic brakes- ISN'T IT TIME WE RECONSIDER REENGINEERING THE MASTER CYLINDER TO SPLIT THE SYSTEM? The fact that many of our M35's went through MWO rebuilds in the late 1980's early 1990's and Uncle didn't see fit to correct a weak design element from the original G742 brake system doesn't mean we can't go back and revise
the brakes. Given that so many M35's are now in civillian and industrial use, how hard would it be to adapt a modern 70 or 80 series master cylinder to split the system into two parts, front axle and rear bogies, to gain a small amount of redundancy over the unpowered hydraulic system?? Just splitting the system alone would increase our safety factors by what, 50 to 100% over the present system?
Even large truck brake air systems have a fail safe feature that when they drop below 60 PSI they lock up, WHY doesn't the M35's system do the same? I know the Army was looking for mission survivability and ease of maintenance, but an M35 in a combat zone with no brakes must have been a threat to the crew and personnel in the immediate area.
IF WE CAN ENGINEER LOCKING HUBS and other upgrades, NOW IS THE TIME TO SAY, CREATE US A NEW MASTER CYLINDER UNIT TO SPLIT THE SYSTEMS. I'm willing to cough a few up to get the safety factor on my truck, as I have to treat each present brake application as a potential BRAKE FAILURE, due to the truck's age and primitive brake design. Would JATONKA's guys be willing to come up with a modification or replacement kit to do just that- split the system? HIs engineering seems to be exceptional from all I've heard, and I'm sure Eastern Surplus and Boyce might be willing to weigh in also.
My two cents,
Sincerely,
Kyle F. McGrogan
1963 Mercedes Benz Unimog S.404.114 (Swiss)
1971 KAiser Jeep M35A2 Wo/W "Saddam's Nightmare" Vietnam and Desert Storm Veteran Deuce.