If you want to get a Unimog that you can drive on the highway for five figures you're not going to find anything in the U500 range except for just below that. Your best bet would be to get an SBU like a 1300 and then retrofit it with fast axles/fast hubs, a Claas overdrive, and a turbocharger. ...chop....
A couple of weeks ago you could have obtained a 2005 U500 with 6800 miles with every conceivable useful option for expedition camper use for US$75K. Check with "coachconvertor" on the www.benzworld.com site. It had CTIS, EAS, VarioPilot, H08 hydraulics, working and crawler gears, etc.
The only Mog that's close for highway use with similar load capacity would be a U2450 with a Claas overdrive. Very hard to find even in Europe, and un-importable because they are too recent. And it wouldn't be any cheaper.
what's the difference between a U500 and a 2450? Thanks
charlieaarons said:If a 2450 registered legally in the US is for sale, consider buying it if the price is right . . .
When there's just two adults to ride in the cab, Charlie's point is spot on, with two mitigating factors being that:Ah, that 2450 - the Doka. My opinion: I'd rather have a well equipped U500 for $10K less and then have a really nice, 3' longer camper built for it, rather than that necessarily short not-really-nice camper currently on it. How is a short camper like that going to accomodate the 5-6 people carried in the Doka cab? That's why I believe in single cab camper Mogs; the camper is small enough for 2-3 people as it is.
Charlie
I did look carefully at the specs for the 2450 that's for sale.
The camper on it is very homemade.
Can you give us a link to that camper? I have a 2450, and I'm thinking of putting a camper on it, so I'd like to check out the one you referred to.
Thanks,
Richard
Richard,
Is your 2450 the one that has the Twin-Disc transmission in it?