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looking to buy a goat?

ccequipment

Member
387
6
18
Location
Unionville,IN
I have always liked the goat, but have never owned one, or driven one. What do i need to look out for when buying one of these? Is having a title a big deal for these, and are they even able to swim, or just cross a little water? Any info on these would be great, thanks
 

sermis

Active member
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Location
Temple, TX
I thought I wanted one Found 3 in Houston. $2,500 -3,500 each.
After talking to people that own them or have worked on them I changed my mind. It appears they are hard to work on and more like dog paddling than swimming. They are haed to get in and out of.
I still think it would be a cool truck to have.
 

Recovry4x4

LLM/Member 785
Super Moderator
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GA Mountains
I can tell you this, after watching Joe's (1958 M-274) Gama Goat off road, they are incredibly nimble.
 

davidkroberts

Active member
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Location
west tennessee
Ive owned one for awhile and i have enjoyed mine. The maintinance can be a problem because of the sealed hull and its more of a problem getting to the part that needs service than servicing the part. Ive never wanted to swim mine mostly because I own a boat and use mine primarily as a offroad machine. I have mine titled in tennessee and it really wasnt any problem.

Top road speed is over 55 usually anything less and changing the filters usually resolves it. It is extremely loud though. As for offroad performance I dont know of anything other than something with tracks that can beat it. The independent suspension makes for a nice smooth ride on the road. And you get some strange looks at red lights.

Dave
 

oilcan

Member
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Location
Ohio
Dave, I showed off some pics of the GA rally at the thanksgiving shindig last week. When the slide show got to your goat the first time, my cousin yelled "WTF is THAT?!"
Each time it came up again, he did the doghead shiver and went a little more insane.
 

doghead

4 Star General /Moderator
Staff member
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Oooooh, gama goat.:oops:

It was Joe Shaeffer at the Ga rally, not Davidkroberts.
 
Last edited:

oilcan

Member
924
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Location
Ohio
:oops: indeed!

Anyhoo, it's the same rig and you'd get the same response so I stand by it. Sorry about the cornfusion, though! CRS.
 

LanceRobson

Well-known member
1,638
206
63
Location
Pinnacle, Stokes County, NC
I drove these and turned wrenches on them for years. I can't ever remember miring one to where we couldn't self-recover it but, hey, maybe I'm just blocking out bad memories!

We hung them up on stumps and down trees a few times though.

Airing down the tires and having chains on will usually let you drive through mud or wet snow with the belly plates dragging. Remember, there's no on board air compressor so be judicious in airing down. They generally don't like snow or ice, the thing just doesn't have the weight or tires to go in either. Chains though, let it handle both.

Maintenance is a pain. As stated, a lot of the time you really can't get at what need fixed, cleaned, lubed or adjusted. You'll spend a fair amount of timed contorted into pretty painful positions. You'll learn to work through access plates, drain plug holes and the like and you'll learn to work by feel, around corners while standing on your head or while draped across something hard and pointy.

With heavy use, cracks, self locking fasteners that won't lock and broken welds can be an issue.

The "carrier" (the rear cargo part) is thin aluminum and would likely need a plywood liner to haul firewood and the like. The end gate is thin aluminum and cannot handle ANY abuse, not even using it as a step or seat. Consider bonding a plywood skin to the inside to protect it. Later end gates came with the plywood skin.

Brakes can be a major PITA. The damn thing has 3,248 u-joints. (at least it seems that way!)

Leave a couple pairs of good hearing protectors in the truck.

There's a cross level line between the two fuel tanks so, if fueling it on even a shallow side slope do it from the uphill tank without removing the downhill cap. (Don't ask!)

There's no spare so be sure to have a "truss kit", it allows you to lock the tractor and carrier out of articulation so you can move a good center axle tire to an outer corner.

Swimming is VERY problematic. From memory, the max cross current is only a few MPH (3?), wave height is limited to 6 inches and if the tire tread is badly worn, you're not going to go anywhere in water. Approach angles are limiting and it doesn't like to crawl out up a muddy slope.

Follow the loading and weight balancing instructions very carefully. The tractor itself is so low in the water that adding a few special purpose kits, like the hard top, fuel fired heater, cab radio, winch, machine gun mount etc, make the truck a non-swimmer.

If the carrier isn't loaded the carrier sits butt end high and can swamp over the front edge. Swimming an empty carrier is asking for trouble.

The carrier end gate must be perfectly flat with NO edge deformations and the carrier end gate opening must be free of dents and distortions. The end gate gasket must be resilient and pliable to seal well. A thick coat of grease on the gasket helps seal it.

All the drain plugs and access covers must be properly installed, free from deformations and gasketed as appropriate.

The bilge pumps and thier hoses must be in perfect order. The screens must be clear. Put enough water in the hull to get up past the axle prop shaft seals. Before pumping out, park it where you can see any water leaks and leave the water in for a few hours to see if anything leaks Then test fire the pump.

When preparing for an assault river crossing or other water op, we used to load them and then "pre-float" them (away from the crossing site) with the only crew being an expeienced driver (who wore a PFD and could swim), no top on the cab or carrier (the kiss on death if it sinks) and a winch cable on the pintle to recover it if it sank.

Rescue divers in engineer bridge boats or rubber boats were ALWAYS on hand.

In short, most active duty units rarely or never swam the Goats. I only ever heard of one National Guard unit that swam them. Every other truck in the uits needed a ford or bridge so why go through the hassle and risk?

All this said, If I can find one in reasonable shape, within 1500 miles and can afford it, I'll buy it.

Lance
 

davidkroberts

Active member
1,453
22
38
Location
west tennessee
Yeah I wasnt at the Ga Rally but i did enjoy the pics.... I was in Iraq at my own MV rally i guess.

Yeah my brakes on mine are an issue but i make due. The sealed hub is a PITA but they are very simple in design.

I dont and will not swim mine (refer to above post) its just too much risk and not enough reward.
 

jfnemt1ff1

Member
526
1
18
Location
Higgins Lake Mi.
I love it when this topic comes up:wink:. The goat is a love hate thing,coming from one the restored on that was far from complete. I thing it is a great truck. I have driven mine from Michigan to Aberdeen after the rebuild. And since I have been to alot of shows and drove it all over the state. It is a little weird to work on but once yoc get use to it its not bad. I take mine for swims when ever I get a chance. (pics here in goat fourm). I have put 4000 miles on it and have taken it out on trailes and got out of spots that others could not. I know of one that won 1st place in a mud boug.
John
Ps I just might sell mine pm me.:razz:
 

ccequipment

Member
387
6
18
Location
Unionville,IN
Thanks for all the info, I found a nice one in good shape for $6k, do you think it is worth it? I thought it sounded like a good price, it does not have a title, does that hurt the price? Anything that i need to look out for before buying?
 
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