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M35A2 Deuce's towing power

remj540

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Round Hill, VA
I recall, while searching the forum's info on drop down hitches, that someone posted that deuces didn't have a lot of towing power. As a new 1969 deuce owner I assumed that they were pretty powerful machines. I can't seem to find the post again but I'm very curious as to experiences that others have had. I planned to tow a 3500lb Bobcat from time to time but I'm a bit concerned now.

Any input is greatly appreciated.

Thanks!
 
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DJones

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
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Location
New Palestine Indiana
I just loaded 8000# of gravel in my deuce Saturday and it pulled just fine. You could feel a little difference in stopping.
:driver:
 

jwaller

Active member
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Location
Columbia, SC
thats going to be a load with the proper trailer. you will def want one that has brakes. good luck. getting going is easy it's the stopping that will be the pucker factor.
 

kubota_247

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Cloquet, MN.
We bought a '71 Kaiser(?) 5-T tractor with a stretched frame and a 5000 Gallon water tank. Do the math. The frame was done by a pro shop. I don't know what other mods were done, but the F.D. used it. Not too good on hills they said. Duh. It's parked out back with the rest of the iron. Go figure. Just hauled home a M50s3 water truck yesterday too. It's red, not green, so we'll have to hide it deep in the woods. Don't want no red iron mixed in with the green iron.:smile:
 

91W350

Well-known member
4,414
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Location
Salina, Kansas
I helped this guy load the old tanker on that trailer and he took of for Lawrence Kansas, ripping right down the Interstate. Three and a half hours later he called to tell me he was home. It is about 150 miles, so he had to average over 40 miles per hour. I was surprised when the phone rang and he said he was home. I agree with brakes on the trailer though, those Bobcats seem to wind up in the ditch a lot. Glen

[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIMfyG-09OE[/media]
 

velociT

New member
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Location
Burnet co. Texas
I recall, while searching the forum's info on drop down hitches, that someone posted that deuces didn't have a lot of towing power. As a new 1969 deuce owner I assumed that they were pretty powerful machines. I can't seem to find the post again but I'm very curious as to experiences that others have had. I planned to tow a 3500lb Bobcat from time to time but I'm a bit concerned now.

Any input is greatly appreciated.

Thanks!
Like someone else said, I wouldn't even feel a 3500lb trailer until I hit the brakes... :mrgreen:

3500lbs is nothing for a deuce. Hauling or towing.
 

my69camaro

Member
82
4
8
Location
La Porte Indiana
I tow bar'd a M818 (~20,000lbs) for 160 miles with my old deuce. 5th gear was a no go on anything but downhills but it held 2,600rpm in 4th just fine. Not a powerhouse but it got the job done. Yeah they're under rated.:twisted:
 
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DeuceNewb

Member
397
6
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Location
Wilmington, NC
I towed my m1028 behind my deuce and couldn't feel it, and i've towed a m109 (16k lbs i think) and it was fine. Slow to accelerate, but stopping was fine, i had no complaints, it was actually a lot better than i thought judging how everybody here makes it seem like the brakes are hardly enough to stop the truck empty. don't drive stupid and you will have no problems. I regularly tow a big trailer with a jeep or chevy on it and it does fine
 

Heavysteven

New member
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Location
Hickory Flat Ga
That's sounds light for a bobcat our T-190 is close to 6,000 lbs. Deuce is rated for 10k trailer no problem. The only issue is building a lower receiver hitch and trailer brake control. My license in georgia says I can only 10k any way.

I agree 100% towing is no problem is getting the trailer brakes to function with the truck proper.

I gave up on pulling a trailer with the deuce. My 350 works great. I can't imagine backing up a small trailer with no power steering...hard work
 

Seth_O

Member
625
7
18
Location
Sac CA
I bought my deuce in UT, and drove it home to CA. Not sure if you're familiar with the Sierra Nevada's, but my duece pulled my 105A2 over the passes (10k ft+ and 7-8% grades) without even noticing it was there. I never dipped below 5th gear or 40mph the entire way. The truck pulled like a mule.
 

Josh

Active member
1,678
12
38
Location
Portland, Oregon
I regularly tow my landcruiser (about 5600lbs will a full tank of gas) and it pulls and stops just fine. Last weekend e went firewood gathering with the deuce, I had 11,450lbs of wood in the truck, and was towing a triaxle trailer with trailer brakes with a total weight of 14,000lbs. I was in 4th gear lo range on most hills, but on the flats she did 50-55 no issues. The trailer brakes where working exellently.

Heres a pick towing the cruiser.
 

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Barrman

Well-known member
5,168
1,589
113
Location
Giddings, Texas
Compared to a modern turbo diesel 1 ton truck. The M35 is pretty slow and under powered on the open road. That might be what you read about. I have flat towed other M35's for hundreds of miles. Sure, you know they are there and a good hill will slow you down. But, they will still pull. Once you get off road pulling a load is where the truck shines and really is in its intended environment. Just remember what the truck was designed for and try to base the uses around that. Because, it does that job to perfection.
 

dittle

Well-known member
1,582
72
48
Location
Albia, IA
Very well said Barrman. I think people tend to forget what the intended purpose of the truck actually was and then try to compare it to a current design vehicle. There is nothing on the civilian market that is designed to do what a deuce was designed for. Apples to Oranges
 
Towing my Setup (Bronco, parts wood etc for a trip) I am approx 7K on the hitch. I lost 3MPH on steep grades (from 29MPH to 26MPH) Otherwise, you really didnt even know there was a trailer unless pulling or decending grades/hills.

I was using a 12V trailer brake with my trailer wired thru relays off the 24V system and using 1 leg of the 24V system (12V) to supply the power to the trailer brakes.
 

Barrman

Well-known member
5,168
1,589
113
Location
Giddings, Texas
One more thing to add. The multifuel engine loves to be used. Just idling or driving around town for a while will make it start to get mad and leak, stumble, slobber, run bad, etc... I think one of the manuals or maybe the ps cartoon even has "load truck to maximum GVW and drive 100 miles, see if problem is still present." The further I go pulling a big load, the faster I can go and the more I can attack the hills. If you start out down on power, have plenty of fresh fuel and let it run. It will get better. Of course, if you have been messing with the fuel flow rate, you better have a pyrometer on there.
 
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