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12-20-2006, 23:16
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#1 (permalink)
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4 Star General
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Hesperia, CA
Posts: 1,341
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Gama Goat Safety
Hi Group,
I was going to post this in the other Gama Goat thread today, but I didn't want to hijack it since this is changing the subject. This is a copy of an old post (over a year ago) from the 2-Stroke Detroit Diesel group on Yahoo, where Goats frequently come up in discussions both because they are DD powered and because the little aluminum 3-53 engine is a popular choice for repowering pickup trucks and the like.
I've never owned a Goat and have no experience with them other than my familiarity with their engine. I don't know the poster other than 'Doc', and I didn't save his e-mail address... Maybe he's a member here, but I doubt it. Either way, I don't think he'd mind my passing this on, which I meant to do some time ago. I'm curious what you guys think about it...
Regards,
Jon
Quote:
I hope no one restoring a Goat is planning on a major road trip, but we used to convoy from Ft. Lewis, WA to Yakima, WA, which is a couple hundred miles away on the other side of the mountains. The noise of that little triple was deafening! We would wear standard hearing protectors with ear muffs over that and still couldn't hear ourselves think. So when you were driving in one, even with a guy in the next seat 2' away, there was a tremendous feeling of isolation, which, with the physical pounding from the sound and the truck, led quickly to fatigue, which led to people falling asleep and driving off the roads.
The mountain passes in Washington State are not very forgiving. There will be either a tree, rock, or several hundred feet of free fall in your path. The only thing in the way of occupant protection is about 1/8" of flat aluminum sheet and a dinky little aluminum bumper that is best used as a step. What the front end hits will be smacking you full force with nothing in front to stop it and several tons behind you pushing forward. We lost several guys that way, two at a time. It's a tough visit to the wife and kids.
Then of course there is the issue of amphibious operations. We prepared a Goat for a big brass demo once. Went through the list from one end to the other several times. Stripped off the canvas, put in the plugs, started the pumps and drove slowly down the boat ramp in front of a bunch of generals and a few Congressmen. The Goat rides in a dead calm with about 4-6" of freeboard, and is propelled by the tires spinning in the water. The driver was about 150' from shore when the freeboard started to reduce visibly, and before he could do anything about it, he was underwater and heading for the lake bottom. Did I mention that the tubs they had for the driver and co-driver seating were very awkward to get in and out of? It was about 45 seconds later (but seemed like an hour) when he popped up and waved at us. Getting the Goat out of the lake was finally assigned to a Navy Reserve unit out of San Diego as their summer training.
It was a very maneuverable vehicle, with great climbing capacity. We never rolled one, and we really should have the way a bunch of 19 - 21 year old kids drove them. They were a blast to drive on the flats, and kept up nicely off road if someone with a bit of caution was leading the way. As far as hauling stuff the way a M-37 (3/4 ton Power Wagon) or M-715 (5/4 ton Jeep pickup) would, it was quite possibly the most inefficient and impractical vehicle a Pentagon committee could have designed.
Every time I see one on eBay (there's one there now), I marvel that they still exist. It is definitely something most collectors will not have, and if the only use is parades and the occasional joyride, they'd probably be a thrill for someone with no memories associated with them. When I look at them, though, I see death looking back.
My goal with a military vehicle is to take an old flat fender Power Wagon and repower it with a 4-53 and gearing that would make it practical on the road. With a good brush rack and a winch on the front, you're looking at some real intimidation factor!
Just my $0.02. Hope I didn't overcharge you.
doc
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__________________
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Where are we going and why am I in this handbasket?
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1951 M52 Tractor with 6-71N Detroit Diesel
1952 V18A/MTQ Studebaker Earth Borer - Pole Setter GASSER AND STAYING THAT WAY!
1962 M197A1 Converter Dolly
1966 M274A2 Mule
1967 M105 Trailer
1968 M35A2 Kaiser-Jeep W/W
1968 M146 Trailer
1970 M274A5 Mule NEED REAR ENGINE GUARD. STOOPID $$$ WILLING TO BE SPENT - PM ME!!!
1984 M1009 Blazer
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12-20-2006, 23:22
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#2 (permalink)
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BANNED
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: cincy, Oh
Posts: 14,570
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RE: Gama Goat Safety
He makes a good point about no frontal protection with tons of weight bejind you. I will think twice about wanting one now. They ARE dang cool looking though.
__________________
Trained at Fort Arnold.
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12-21-2006, 08:35
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#3 (permalink)
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Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Meadows of Dan, Virginia
Posts: 9,866
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RE: Gama Goat Safety
The swimming feature of an MV is probably never very useful, that goes for the M656 8x8 and M548 tracked carrier too. Conditions must be ideal, no current, no waves and river/lake banks that don't slope too much.
I think the M548 started out with swimming capability but was changed to fording only (David can correct me on this), which should tell the story.
__________________
Bjorn
MEP-018A (needs new generator head)
Avatar: XM757 in OK prepared for 1,000 mile trip home. Part of 6,000 mile journey in 2006.
1968 M49A2C modified with 1960 M756A2 truck bed and 1975 HIAB 765A knuckleboom, exhaust brake, VIC-1 and more.
1969 Ford XM757 8x8, 5-ton Pershing 1A truck tractor...the "improved MV".
"Some things can't be made better, just differently......a lot of things actually"
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12-21-2006, 09:17
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#4 (permalink)
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4 Star General
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: West Tennessee
Posts: 1,744
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RE: Gama Goat Safety
Yep, the M548 swam, so did the M113. I'll agree to disagree on the usefulness of swimming - but you're probably forgetting a few older vehicles - LVT, GPA and most notably DUKW, the later of which was successfully demonstrated in near-hurricane conditions December 1, 1942, rescuing Coast Guard personnel whose vessel was overcome by the storm.
Bjorn, have I sent you the swimming photos of the M656? Let me know.
Merry Christmas all!
David
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12-21-2006, 10:50
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#5 (permalink)
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Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Meadows of Dan, Virginia
Posts: 9,866
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No swimming photos, David, although I have the APG video from the 60's. Please, send them, the more the merrier, also, if you have later date images from fielded unts. Much appreciated.
The XM757 doesn't swim, not enough boyancy in the rear.
Of course with the (Pershing missile) trailer it would hardly be possible anyway.
The XM757 can only ford to 40 inches, no deep water fording kit here.
__________________
Bjorn
MEP-018A (needs new generator head)
Avatar: XM757 in OK prepared for 1,000 mile trip home. Part of 6,000 mile journey in 2006.
1968 M49A2C modified with 1960 M756A2 truck bed and 1975 HIAB 765A knuckleboom, exhaust brake, VIC-1 and more.
1969 Ford XM757 8x8, 5-ton Pershing 1A truck tractor...the "improved MV".
"Some things can't be made better, just differently......a lot of things actually"
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12-21-2006, 10:54
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#6 (permalink)
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Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Meadows of Dan, Virginia
Posts: 9,866
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Now, with a little imagination, one can make any vehicle swim. This inclides tanks.
__________________
Bjorn
MEP-018A (needs new generator head)
Avatar: XM757 in OK prepared for 1,000 mile trip home. Part of 6,000 mile journey in 2006.
1968 M49A2C modified with 1960 M756A2 truck bed and 1975 HIAB 765A knuckleboom, exhaust brake, VIC-1 and more.
1969 Ford XM757 8x8, 5-ton Pershing 1A truck tractor...the "improved MV".
"Some things can't be made better, just differently......a lot of things actually"
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12-21-2006, 11:42
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#7 (permalink)
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General
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Elizabeth, Colorado
Posts: 568
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Some points made are true, They are thin aluminum, hard to get in and out of, and don't swim well, but beyond that it's an article that's way exaggerated. Yes it's noisy but with halfway decent hearing protection it's great. I use head phones and listen to music when driving. It's comfortable, I drove to Kansas City form Elizabeth Colorado and had a ball.
The 353 puts out 103 hp and we zipped along at 55 and made 14.2 mpg.
The front bumper is a steel 3 inch I beam, probably more steel than a Cadillac bumper,
One little bilge pump that pumps 53 gpm, not much if some dummy forgot to install the hull plugs, which was documented to be the biggest cause of sinking. (second only to torpedo's)
The early Goats were plagued with problems, most were design flaws like restrictive exhaust systems causing overheated cylinder liners and early engine failure, but these were worked out very early in the production cycle. The swim issues, however, were never really rectified. Most Goats were rendered non swim by moving the exhaust tip down so that the engine could not run in the water.( Stupid yes, but true)
Any way, were all allowed to have our likes and dislikes, but temper them with some knowledge of the system before making judgement.
Merry Christmas All
__________________
Mike
MVPA #171
MVCC
USN 4/64 - 7/72
1971 XM-816 "Cap'n Hook"
1972 M-35A2
1972 M-561 GamaGoat
1983 M-105A2
“America will never be destroyed from the outside.
If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because
we destroyed ourselves.”
Abraham Lincoln
God, Bless America!
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12-21-2006, 19:39
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#8 (permalink)
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4 Star General
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Olive Branch Mississipi
Posts: 1,782
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Our county fire rescue unit had a goat many years ago. They loved it when they had to head up through the powerline right of ways to recover people/equipment. The tires on theirs were not the greatest, they said it was all over the road at 45mph or better. They turned it in eventually and replaced it with several CUCV's. My brother in law drove the old goat a lot. He liked it off road, said it was terribly noisy, and hard to get in and out of. None the less, he said it was a good truck for what they used it for.
__________________
Robert Miller
Currently out on the road programming robots.......
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12-21-2006, 20:00
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#9 (permalink)
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General
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Lohrville Iowa
Posts: 526
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HI all just had to say: I wiil soon be a new owner of a Goat. I think the noise could be a problem but my M35 is not all that quite. Like others have said it is a love or hate type of MV. But you have to say there are not to many other MV on the road that look that neat.
HAPPY HOILDAYS TO ALL.
John
__________________
1970 M561 Sold
1970 M35a2 Non turbo
1967 M725 Sold
1971 M35a2 w/w w/turbo
1957 M46 Bat wing shop truck
1986 M105a2
1958 2a-016-1 gen-set
John
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12-21-2006, 20:26
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#10 (permalink)
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General
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Elizabeth, Colorado
Posts: 568
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Far Out John,
Welcome to the Goat herders,
Just use a good shooters ear protectors, no problem.
Like I said, I have a cheap head phone from Harbor Freight that also has speakers, I listen to tunes (Old stuff) when I drive .
Check out www.Gamagoat.com for info on the Goat.
Merry Christmas
__________________
Mike
MVPA #171
MVCC
USN 4/64 - 7/72
1971 XM-816 "Cap'n Hook"
1972 M-35A2
1972 M-561 GamaGoat
1983 M-105A2
“America will never be destroyed from the outside.
If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because
we destroyed ourselves.”
Abraham Lincoln
God, Bless America!
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