biotect
Designer
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7. Finding a MAN HX or SX Second-Hand
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Although the HX and SX are still fairly new, some used, ex-military HX’s and SX’s have begun appearing for sale in the UK specifically – see http://www.mascus.com/transportatio...-32-440-8x8-heavy-recovery-unit/cl5jgghh.html and http://www.trucklocator.co.uk/uk-man+-hx+-truck-131373/ . Of course, one potential draw-back is that these will be British-style, driver-sits-on-the-right configurations:
SX 32.440 (SX-45):
HX 32.440 (HX-77):
For another ex-military HX on the British second-hand market, see http://autoline.info/sf/truck-platf...HICLE-2008-L042514--13091202442672192500.html .
Note that MAN SX 32.440 corresponds to SX-45, and MAN HX-32.440 BB corresponds to HX-77. Further:
MAN SX 25.440 corresponds to SX-44
MAN HX 25.440 BB corresponds to HX-58
and
MAN HX 18.330 BB corresponds to HX-60
See http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAN_gl#HX-Serie and http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?hl=en&sl=de&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fde.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FMAN_gl%23HX-Serie .
I tried researching comparative deployment in Germany versus the UK, but came up short. The only "hard" number for the German armed forces that I found was 14,000, which is the total number of MAN-KATs that were delivered up to 1984, or 30 years ago -- see http://www.military-today.com/trucks/man_kat1_8x8.htm . Of course thousands of MAN-KATs have also been exported. But I could not find a total figure for the number of MAN-KATs still in service in Germany today, or the comparative number of newer SX and HX trucks. Furthermore, my impression is that Germany’s “GTF” procurement program is very slow-moving, and that aging Bundeswehr MAN-KATs have not necessarily been replaced by HX or SX trucks, but rather, as often as not by Zetros or Actros trucks. Again, see http://translate.google.co.uk/trans...f_K7rTcHdV7XVX NUJwzzvP8BsADx5A!!/&sandbox=1 . And even if the Bundeswehr were not replacing MAN-KATs with Actros and Zetros, the German government probably wants to replace aging MAN-KATs as slowly as possible, in order to save money.
If all of this is true, then it seems quite possible that one might sooner find a used HX or SX truck in the UK, as opposed to Germany. At present (May 2014), no ex-military HX or SX trucks are for sale by Aigner, FTN, or Mobile.de. Instead, just the usual assortment of MAN-KATs – see http://www.aignertrucks.com/en/vehicles/current-stock , http://www.inter-commerz.com/index.php/en/katalog-3 , http://suchen.mobile.de/lkw-inserat/man-kat-8x8-ladekran-perfekter-zustand-freiburg/194619517.html , http://suchen.mobile.de/lkw-inserat/man-kat1-mil-5t-glw-4x4-pritsche-winde-h-zul-fähig-potsdam/182488836.html , and http://suchen.mobile.de/lkw-inserat/man-man-kat1-a1-dfaeg-6x6-militärtruck-geländegig-hennef/36400632.html . But again, I am not certain whether this is an accurate description of that state of HX and SX procurement in Germany, and egn would be in a much better position to make such an assessment.
Now overall, one gets the impression that a Tatra 815 chassis – either a commercial “Phoenix” construction truck, or a military-specification T 815 – would be much easier to find, especially second-hand, than an equivalent SX chassis.
It’s worth remembering that the HX chassis is not sufficiently rigid to mount a fully integrated camper body without a sub-frame, and the HX suspension uses leaf springs instead of progressive coil. The SX is the true "technology successor" to the the MAN-KAT A1, and not the HX. The HX, instead, is really just a militarized version of a MAN TGA chassis. One wants an SX chassis, not an HX. But MAN does not seem to be selling nearly as many SX models as HX models, so finding a used SX chassis might prove comparatively difficult.
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CONTINUED IN NEXT POST
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CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS POST
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7. Finding a MAN HX or SX Second-Hand
*********************************
Although the HX and SX are still fairly new, some used, ex-military HX’s and SX’s have begun appearing for sale in the UK specifically – see http://www.mascus.com/transportatio...-32-440-8x8-heavy-recovery-unit/cl5jgghh.html and http://www.trucklocator.co.uk/uk-man+-hx+-truck-131373/ . Of course, one potential draw-back is that these will be British-style, driver-sits-on-the-right configurations:
SX 32.440 (SX-45):
HX 32.440 (HX-77):
For another ex-military HX on the British second-hand market, see http://autoline.info/sf/truck-platf...HICLE-2008-L042514--13091202442672192500.html .
Note that MAN SX 32.440 corresponds to SX-45, and MAN HX-32.440 BB corresponds to HX-77. Further:
MAN SX 25.440 corresponds to SX-44
MAN HX 25.440 BB corresponds to HX-58
and
MAN HX 18.330 BB corresponds to HX-60
See http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAN_gl#HX-Serie and http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?hl=en&sl=de&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fde.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FMAN_gl%23HX-Serie .
I tried researching comparative deployment in Germany versus the UK, but came up short. The only "hard" number for the German armed forces that I found was 14,000, which is the total number of MAN-KATs that were delivered up to 1984, or 30 years ago -- see http://www.military-today.com/trucks/man_kat1_8x8.htm . Of course thousands of MAN-KATs have also been exported. But I could not find a total figure for the number of MAN-KATs still in service in Germany today, or the comparative number of newer SX and HX trucks. Furthermore, my impression is that Germany’s “GTF” procurement program is very slow-moving, and that aging Bundeswehr MAN-KATs have not necessarily been replaced by HX or SX trucks, but rather, as often as not by Zetros or Actros trucks. Again, see http://translate.google.co.uk/trans...f_K7rTcHdV7XVX NUJwzzvP8BsADx5A!!/&sandbox=1 . And even if the Bundeswehr were not replacing MAN-KATs with Actros and Zetros, the German government probably wants to replace aging MAN-KATs as slowly as possible, in order to save money.
If all of this is true, then it seems quite possible that one might sooner find a used HX or SX truck in the UK, as opposed to Germany. At present (May 2014), no ex-military HX or SX trucks are for sale by Aigner, FTN, or Mobile.de. Instead, just the usual assortment of MAN-KATs – see http://www.aignertrucks.com/en/vehicles/current-stock , http://www.inter-commerz.com/index.php/en/katalog-3 , http://suchen.mobile.de/lkw-inserat/man-kat-8x8-ladekran-perfekter-zustand-freiburg/194619517.html , http://suchen.mobile.de/lkw-inserat/man-kat1-mil-5t-glw-4x4-pritsche-winde-h-zul-fähig-potsdam/182488836.html , and http://suchen.mobile.de/lkw-inserat/man-man-kat1-a1-dfaeg-6x6-militärtruck-geländegig-hennef/36400632.html . But again, I am not certain whether this is an accurate description of that state of HX and SX procurement in Germany, and egn would be in a much better position to make such an assessment.
Now overall, one gets the impression that a Tatra 815 chassis – either a commercial “Phoenix” construction truck, or a military-specification T 815 – would be much easier to find, especially second-hand, than an equivalent SX chassis.
It’s worth remembering that the HX chassis is not sufficiently rigid to mount a fully integrated camper body without a sub-frame, and the HX suspension uses leaf springs instead of progressive coil. The SX is the true "technology successor" to the the MAN-KAT A1, and not the HX. The HX, instead, is really just a militarized version of a MAN TGA chassis. One wants an SX chassis, not an HX. But MAN does not seem to be selling nearly as many SX models as HX models, so finding a used SX chassis might prove comparatively difficult.
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CONTINUED IN NEXT POST
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