Ever want Humvee? Already have one?

   / Ever want Humvee? Already have one? #11  
I used to drive those brand new out of the AM General plant in Mishawaka, IN where they were built, and from the South Bend, IN plant where they were retrofitted. This was back in the mid 80's. We'd drive them from the factory to rail sidings all over northern Indiana for transport to places far away. While they were not speedy, they'd go just about anywhere. AM General had an off-road torture track next to the South Bend plant. Here's a google satellite link to the old South Bend plant and test areas.

https://www.google.com/maps/@41.6389538,-86.2599368,2514m/data=!3m1!1e3

The off-set oval at the bottom has an obstacle course inside it. And the woods and swamp to the west of that oval and to the north of that long straight away are full of trails, holes, fallen trees, swamps, deep water, mud, etc...

The HMMWV offers 40% of slide slope, 60% of slope-climbing and 60in of water fording capacities, making it an outstanding off-road vehicle. - Image - Army Technology

Well, maybe on a couple of occasions when we'd pick up our lot of Hummers for transport we might have gotten lost leaving the plant grounds and maybe we accidentally ended up in those woods and swamps.... several times.... :confused3:

Many times we'd hook up a tow bar and take two at a time to other cities for rail loading. They'd have no problems rolling along at highway speeds towing another one behind them. Several times people would forget to set the brakes on the rail cars and as you drove between cars, they'd shift and the steel plates between the cars would fall out and you'd drop the front tires down between the cars and the Hummer would be bottomed out behind the front tires. We'd just engage the front wheels, put it in reverse and climb back out. You could stop on a severe slope, then continue up it. And you could do that going down a hill, stop half way down, then back up the hill. They were good 4 wheel drive units.

Back when the Terminator convinced AM General to sell them to the public, they opened up the track to Hummer owners and conducted driving clinics for them.

My mother-in-law worked at the Mishawaka plant on the assembly line for about 20 years and is retired from AM General. When she retired, they gave her one of the commercial units (H1's, the original) to drive around for a weekend. She had a blast. :)

Anyhow, they served their purpose. The only thing I didn't like about them is they only seat 4 people. But that's what they were designed to do. They had many different configurations. The factory had several pickup truck type hummers that they used for running around the plant. Those were pretty cool. They had an ambulance model. A troop transport model. But the coolest ones had missile launchers... :thumbsup:

HMMWV Vehicle Versions.jpg
 
   / Ever want Humvee? Already have one? #12  
Nice story. What all this costs the tax payer. I guess it's chicken sheit compared to Stealth bombers and Abrams tanks.
 
   / Ever want Humvee? Already have one? #13  
A little off topic but I went to the website yesterday and was distracted by the dozers and backhoes. Several 10 year old backhoes with less than 300 hours, a Case 1150E dozer with 7 hours on it. I got to ask, Is all this equipment needed in the first place? In the case of the dozer, that is one shift of work! More likely those hours added up during routine maintenance and was really never used at all.
 
   / Ever want Humvee? Already have one? #14  
A little off topic but I went to the website yesterday and was distracted by the dozers and backhoes. Several 10 year old backhoes with less than 300 hours, a Case 1150E dozer with 7 hours on it. I got to ask, Is all this equipment needed in the first place? In the case of the dozer, that is one shift of work! More likely those hours added up during routine maintenance and was really never used at all.

I was in a squadron that de commissioned. We threw away probably millions of dollars at acquisition cost worth of tools and supplies. Dumped them in big roll off garbage cans. Lord help you if you pocketed a wrench they would ship you to Leavenworth. The government way!
 
   / Ever want Humvee? Already have one? #15  
Nice story. What all this costs the tax payer. I guess it's chicken sheit compared to Stealth bombers and Abrams tanks.

I heard once they were like $55-60K per unit back then.

AM General also had a 5-ton refurb program going on at the time. The Government wound send them their used 5-ton's and AM General would strip them down and refurb them for about 2/3 the cost of a new one. Mom said some of those were particularly scary when it came to power washing them down as who knows what countries they were in, what contaminants were on them, etc... She said undercoating was the worst job in the factory. They'd go through several tyvek jumpsuits a day.
 
   / Ever want Humvee? Already have one? #16  
Friend of mine had one in college. We had a blast in that thing. It was a 6.2 so it would barely go 60 downhill but at the time we thought it was great. I bought a H2 about 6 years ago and kept it for a couple of years. Fun vehicles.
 
   / Ever want Humvee? Already have one? #17  
We could go 60 towing another hummer behind us on flat land with no problems, as I recall. It took a while to get there, but it would get there. We'd get up to speed on the highway, yank out the hand throttle and kick back for the 20 mile ride to the next town.
 
   / Ever want Humvee? Already have one? #18  
Did any one ever find all those WWII Jeeps that were supposed to be brand new, packed in grease, still crated, that people used to talk about?

The Canadian Gov was getting rid of some Jeeps twenty or so years ago. They were so unstable and dangerous, that they actually cut each into four pieces, before auctioning them off.
 
   / Ever want Humvee? Already have one? #19  
Did any one ever find all those WWII Jeeps that were supposed to be brand new, packed in grease, still crated, that people used to talk about?

The Canadian Gov was getting rid of some Jeeps twenty or so years ago. They were so unstable and dangerous, that they actually cut each into four pieces, before auctioning them off.

Why yes, they did....
Army Jeep In A Crate for $50
 
   / Ever want Humvee? Already have one? #20  
We could go 60 towing another hummer behind us on flat land with no problems, as I recall. It took a while to get there, but it would get there. We'd get up to speed on the highway, yank out the hand throttle and kick back for the 20 mile ride to the next town.

You must have had a different engine. The 6.2 had like 150 HP. It was not a highway tow vehicle by any stretch of the imagination. The term I have heard was it won't' pull a greased string out a cats *****. Maybe this one had different gears??? That could have made a big difference on the highway.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2012 VANGUARD 53FT DRY VAN TRAILER (A53426)
2012 VANGUARD 53FT...
(3) Goodyear 10R 22.5 Tires (A51573)
(3) Goodyear 10R...
2024 JOHN DEERE 8R 280 LOT NUMBER 8 (A53084)
2024 JOHN DEERE 8R...
2018 Komatsu WA380-8 Articulated Wheel Loader (A51691)
2018 Komatsu...
2013 International DuraStar 4400 Altec AM547 50FT Material Handling Insulated Forestry Bucket Truck (A51692)
2013 International...
Yale 50LX Cushion Tire Forklift (A49461)
Yale 50LX Cushion...
 
Top