I think Bob missed my point a bit and as a certified Unimog fanatic, he went on the defense of the Unimog. Even though I have only ever owned one Unimog, I also consider myself a fanatic and I certainly am not dismissing the abilites of an Unimog in any way. My point was simply that an Unimog, especially a U1300L is a bit overkill for a "huntin' rig".
Now John, no offense intended, but you speak a lot of theory and little practice. First off, are you in MN as your profile implies or Canada as your reference to a "Ministry" implies. As far as I know, we have no ministries of anything in the US.
If Canada, yes, it is easier to import later Unimogs. In the US, not quite as easy. DOT exemption occrurs only at 25 years of age. Then you need to convince customs that you are going to convert it to a camper so you don;t get hit with ridiculous customs duties in place to protect the US truck manaufacturers. Then there are 50 different states with 50 different requirements as titling and registering the vehicle.
Yes, English is taught universally in Germany, but that means nothing when it comes to dealing with civil servants and other clerical type folks. Many are very hesitant to use their English or it is simply very poor from lack of use. I have experienced this first hand taking vehicles both to and from Germany and dealing with thing like car registration while living there.
Every dealer has different policies in regards to warranties. A blanket statement like that is simply wrong. At minimum, you can at least inspect and drive a vehicle that is already in country.
Sure, you can buy two trucks for half the price of one in country at a dealer. I agree with that. But the end cost will reflect a much smaller margin than you think.
The most amusing statement you make is about the Euro conversion. Price increases in Germany are attributable to one thing only and that is called INFLATION. You sound just like all the pissy Germans whining that the Euro made everything more expensive. The Euro was permanently tied to the Deutschmark at DM 1.93 to 1 Euro years before the introduction of the Euro. For an entire year, both currencies were in use simultaneously so the DM could be phased out smoothly. The reason the trucks are more expensive to us in the US is because our dollar is in the shi##er and worth very little against the Euro right now. This is the number one reason why I haven't imported anything recently.
I'd like to know what magical method you would use to ship two trucks for the price of one? Sure, a container cost a flat amount up to its weight limit, but I'm not sure if you can even get a 1300 into a container. I've heard of three 404's piggybacked into a forty forter and I have done two Iltis and Thing in a forty footer, but single vehicles are far more economical to ship via RoRo. RoRo is priced by cubic volume of the vehicle, so 1=1 and 2=2. No economies of scale with that one.
As for where to buy German surplus, here you go:
www.vebeg.de
Knock yourself out. I'd love to hear about your 1300L when you get it and what your final cost is.
Cheers!
Greg
I have to agree with Bob. A unimog is a very different animal then a F350 truck. The unimogs were designed for hard military use and outstanding offroad ability. You simply can't get this in our domestic trucks.
As far as importation of a unimog, its really not that difficult.
Our Ministry of transportation runs a check of the VIN number and tells you if its admissable for registration. Customs allows importation of vehicles 15 years or older period. After 15 years most restrictions of importation are removed. I believe its to artifically drive up the prices of current vehicles in North America. This creates barriers to entry.
As far as the German language barrier, english is a requirement in this country. Taught as a second language. Most speak it as a second language.
Most dealers importing these trucks into north america offer no warrantee or guarantee. They recieve the vehicle, change the oils, make sure everything works on it and mark it up.
I can purchase two unimogs dirct from mil surplus for the price of one from a dealer. Shipping for two is the same as well and arrangements can be made to deliver it only a few miles from my house. I looked into this before.
All I need is the contact number for the military surplus operation in Germany that deals with their governemnt liquidation of surplus stock.
I regret that I didn't purchase one before Germany adopted the euro currency. Overnight this doubled the price of these trucks.
If anyone has the contact number/email for the German liquidation department of defence please let me know. I need to start somewere.
As long as these local trucks demand $40,000-$60,000 I will never be able to afford one.
John