I also am looking at the LMTV's that are currently on the market. Seem to be quite a few under 10K that seem to run. I know "running" and good condition are very different.
I live in Montana, and near mountains, and I lots of messing around on some friends ranches. Mountain roads dont get plowed much.
I have quite a bit of experience with LMTV's ish..
I drove one alot int a deployment to Iraq in 2005. Mostly night driving with NVG's. Always the slowest vehicle, so i learned quickly how to drive a slow vehicle fast.
I usually had enough wight in it to completely compress the rear springs, really should have had the 5 ton.
I completely ran it out of water twice, in over 100deg temps do to failed water pump gasket. 1st time i only had gasket material and rtv, and that didnt hold long. I was stuck a crapy base for a week.
The second time, tried putting more water in, and for some reason it didn't want to stay in, came right back out the resivour. Put the cap back on and took off to finish the 45 min drive to our destination. Temp needle was very high for about 10 minutes, then cooled off to much cooler than normal, im guessing that's because there was no more water on the sender. So flat out over 100 degrees, and no water for 45 min. Made it to the base, died and wouldn't start right as i was pulling in the front gate. Changed the waterpump and gasket the next day, and drove it home, and continued to use it for 2 more months like nothing happened.
That was the only major issue I ever had with it, and it was always over loaded, and always driven hard. I really liked the truck. Alot of people complained about them, but they seemed to be mostly issues when they were first released.
Most parts seem to be available commercially, at least the important ones. (engine, tranny, bearings, consumables...) Is this the case?
It would be sweet to build a couple of different boxes for the back depending on use. Camper, flatbed, maybe a dump...
I have driven the 939's quite a bit as well, but I think the LTMVs are just more friendly to drive.
Talk me out of it.
Ryan