Why we are starting with this truck?
We both really enjoy going and exploring new areas and we want a vehicle we can take anywhere. After having a few 4x4 vehicles we considered up armor and adding over landing capabilities. Upgrades (metal bumper, rock sliders, bash plate, suspension lift, bigger tires, winch) add a lot of weight and make the vehicle perform much worse on road. In addition it cuts into the total weight budget of the vehicle so you can carry less. At the end of the day you end up camping in a tent which has no AC. You cook on camping stoves and have no bathroom per-say. So you are effected by the elements a great deal. This limits what seasons and regions you can travel into.
I then started looking at any truck that had good out of the box 4x4 capabilities that I would not need to dramatically up fit. Of course the Unimog looks like a dream vehicle because of it's capabilities but TBH they are quite expensive. After more research into pinzgaur, volvo, tatra, man, unicat, steyr, puch I discovered the US military surplus S&S trucks. Much to my surprise they can be had very cheap.
Stewart & Stevenson, BAE and now Oshkosh Trucks
The M1078 is one of a dozen trucks all sharing common design and 85% parts interchangeability. The design is based on the Steyr 12M18. Steyr is now owned by Mercedes Benz. Due to USA munitions laws 95% of the truck must be domestically manufactured so in time of war we can continue producing munitions of war. This truck was designed to replace the "Duece and Half" named because it has 2.5 ton in bed capacity.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M35_series_2½-ton_6x6_cargo_truck
The truck is designed to be easy to drive by someone with no heavy equipment experience. So it has power steering and an automatic transmission.
Through the years the truck was constantly upgraded as newer parts/designs were available. I have an A0 (original) model but there are A1 and soon A2 models.
Engine:
Caterpillar 3116 6.6 liter Diesel. 250 Hp 750 ft lbs torque.
Gets 6.5 MPG under max load. I'm getting 8 mpg.
Transmission:
Allison 3400 series automatic
has 7 gears. Under highway use starts in 2nd gear. Pressing mode button unlocks 1st and then limits range to first 5 gears. Designed for off road use. There is some kind of 70:30 split rear:front on highway. Mode makes power 50:50.
There is no transfer case. No high/lode mode.
Based on Military spec the top speed of the vehicle is 55 mph and is governed.
Axles:
Meritor solid axles. Axles feed gears in the hubs that do final reduction. This greatly reduces the drive shaft and differential size. To get higher highway speed people are putting in 3.02 differentials which pushes top speed to 63 mph. The front differential has 22" inches of ground clearance. So it does not trip stop light turn sensors. It is 1.5" higher then the ground clearance of a Unimog with portal axles.
Some other interesting stuff:
Central Tire Inflation System (CTIS)
Being a large commercial truck the engine generates air for the air brakes which operate just like any big truck. The air is also used to air up/down the tires. The controller is in the cab and allows you go from 45 psi (highway) to 25 cross country or 15 offroad/sand. Tires are giant 46" ZXL or XZL tires which can only be had as military surplus. The rims are bead locked split rim design which allow for very low air pressure and field repair. A run flat insert is available which is a aluminum ring. With run flat the wheels weigh 350lbs otherwise only 250lbs from what I'm told.
The air box sits on top of the frame rails and has a snorkel that extends above the top of the cab. The only computers are the transmission control unit which is in the dash and the CTIS. There is an air operated fan disconnect to allow for deep water fording. To see that in action watch: