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2½-ton 6×6 truck

The 2+12-ton, 6×6 truck was a standard class of medium duty trucks, designed at the beginning of World War II for the US Armed Forces, in service for over half a century, from 1940 into the 1990s.[nb 1] Also frequently known as the deuce and a half, or just deuce, this nickname was popularized post WWII, most likely in the Vietnam war era.[2] The basic cargo versions were designed to transport a cargo load of nominally 2+12 short tons (5,000 lb; 2,300 kg) over all terrain, in all weather. The 2+12-ton trucks were used ubiquitously in World War II, and continued to be the U.S. standard medium duty truck class after the war, including wide usage in the Korean and Vietnam Wars, as well as the first Gulf War.

A Red Ball Express truck gets stuck in the mud during World War II, 1944.
1971 AM General M35A2 with winch and camouflage cargo cover

Originally, five different designs were standardized by the U.S.; two were also standardized by Canada. During World War II the most important model for the U.S. Army was the GMC CCKW or "Jimmy", with over 560,000 units built. Another 200,000+ deuces were Studebaker and REO US6, built primarily for Lend-Lease export, mostly to the Soviet Union, and many others have been exported to smaller militaries. In addition to the 6x6 trucks, a significant minority of these trucks were also built minus the front-wheel drive, as 6x4 trucks.[nb 2] The nickname "Jimmy", a phonetical diminutive of GMC, could be applied to both their 6x6 and 6x4 units.

After World War II, the M35 series truck, originally developed by REO, became the standard 2+12-ton truck. First fielded in the 1950s, the M35 family became one of the most successful and long-lived series of trucks ever deployed by the U.S. military. They were used in Vietnam and continued to be used with various modifications into the late 1990s.[3]

In 1991, the U.S. military began replacing the 2+12-ton, ten-wheeled (6x6 and 6x4) trucks, that were originally classified as "light-heavy" in WW II, and "medium duty" later in their service life, with a significantly different design: the four-wheeled (4x4), cab over engine "light medium", but equally 2+12-ton rated, LMTV variants of the Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles (FMTV) .

Of the almost 2.4 million trucks that the U.S. Army bought between 1939 and December 1945 (across all payload weight classes), just over one third (~812,000) were 2+12-ton trucks, the vast majority of which (over 675,000 units) were six by six variants—outnumbering the almost 650,000 World War II jeeps.[1] A further ~118,000 2+12-ton trucks were built as 6x4 driven units.

The 2+12-ton cargo truck was considered such a valuable piece of equipment that General Eisenhower wrote that most senior officers regarded it as "one of the six most vital" U.S. vehicles to win the war.[nb 3] It has been called the most important truck of World War II, and the 6×6 became known as the "workhorse of the army".[1] According to Hyde (2013): "Each of the three axles had its own differential, so power could be applied to all six wheels on rough terrain and steep hills. The front axle was typically disengaged on smooth highways, where these 'workhorses' often carried loads much above their rated capacity."[1]

Half a century after World War II, the remanufactured 2+12-ton M35 trucks still met 95 percent of the performance requirements at 60 percent of the cost of a new FMTV vehicle.[3]

History edit

 
U.S. Army vehicles on a road in Belgium, 19 January 1945

In 1939-1940 the U.S. Army Ordnance Corps was developing a 2+12-ton (5,000 lbs, 2,300 kg) load-rated 6×6 tactical cargo truck that could operate off-road in all weather. Dump, semi-tractor, tanker, and other bodies were also planned.[5][6]

Yellow Coach (a GM company), Studebaker, International Harvester, and REO Motor Car Company submitted designs, all except REO's were accepted and in production by 1941. Yellow's CCKW became the Army standard, International's M-5-6 became Navy and Marine Corps standard, and Studebaker's US6 was built for export to allied countries. REO built the Studebaker design.[6][7][8][9]

In the late 1940s the military needed a new standard truck. Chrysler, GMC, REO, and Studebaker submitted designs. The REO design was standardized for all services as the M35, and continued standard until 1990. The GMC was classed as substitute standard M135 in the US but became standard in Canada.[10][11]

Designs edit

GMC CCKW edit

 
GMC CCKW

As the standard US Army design during World War II, over 560,000 were built, more than any other US vehicle except the "Jeep". By 1947 there were over 20 standardized bodies, and many more special modifications.

Production began at Yellow Coach's Pontiac, Michigan truck plant in 1941 and at Chevrolet's St. Louis plant in 1942. In 1943 Yellow was renamed G.M.C., leading to the popular nickname "Jimmy". Production ended in 1945.

Early trucks had GM's standard closed cab, from July 1943 military open cabs, which were easier to build and lowered shipping height, were used. To conserve steel, later cargo bodies were built largely of wood. The C.O.E. AFKWX, 6x4 CCW, and amphibious DUKW were mechanically virtually identical and were built next to CCKWs in both plants.[12][13][14][15][16]

Studebaker US6 edit

 
Studebaker US6

The US6 was very similar in layout to, and shared some components with, the CCKW. Studebaker built over 195,000 at their South Bend, Indiana plant between June 1941 and August 1945, REO built another 22,000 in 1944–1945. The majority were exported Lend-Lease to the Soviet Union.

Early trucks used a commercial style closed cab, in December 1942 an open military style cab entered production. The Soviet Union preferred the closed cabs for their extreme weather, so in March 1943 the open cabs were discontinued, after only about 10,000 were built.

The Studebakers were very successful in the Soviet Union, where they carried large loads on poor roads in extreme weather. They were so successful that they were closely copied as the ZIS-/ZIL-151 and ZIL-157 family of trucks, built in the USSR until 1966 and in China until 1986.[17][18][19][20][21]

IHC M-5-6 edit

 
International M-5H-6

The International design began production at Ft. Wayne, Indiana, in 1941. 500 M-5-6s and 3,000 M-5-6x4s, with a commercial K model cab, were complete by 1942, and were exported to the Soviet Union. The design then was upgraded, with a larger engine, tires, military open cab, and other improvements, and standardized as the M-5H-6 for the US Navy and Marines. The only 2+12-ton with locking differentials, it had excellent off-road performance. More than 30,000 of all models were built between 1941 and 1945.[22][23][24][25][26]

REO M35 edit

 
REO M35

The standard post-war 2+12-ton truck M35 was manufactured by REO, Kaiser-Jeep, Curtis-Wright, Studebaker, Studebaker-Packard, AM General, and Bombardier (Canada) from 1950 until the late 1980s, with remanufacture extending into FY1999. The M35 has had the widest range of bodies of any US truck.[citation needed] The cab design itself became the military standard, also used by 5 and 10-ton trucks. First built with a gasoline engine, in 1964 the multi-fuel became standard. In 1991 existing M35s began to be upgraded with diesel engines and automatic transmissions. Canadian trucks had automatic transmissions as built.[27][28][29]

GMC M135 edit

 
GMC M211

An evolution from their widely successful CCKW, General Motors' successor "Deuce and a Half" 2+12-ton M135 was classed as a substitute standard in the US Army after the REO M35 was standardized, and thus was employed in much smaller numbers, but the M135 was also widely used by the Canadian Army.

The six-wheel M135 cargo / personnel truck featured a 180-inch wheelbase with a single-wheel rear tandem and 11:00x20 size tires, necessitating a wheel well in the cargo bed for clearance. The M211 was identical except it had a dual-wheel tandem and smaller 9:00x20 tires. Other dual tandem versions produced were the M217 fuel tanker, M220 shop van, and M222 water tanker, plus the shorter M215 dump truck and M221 tractor with a 168-inch wheelbase. The M135 was the only 2+12-ton truck of the era designed with an automatic transmission. The transmission had 4 speeds and 2 ranges, with a single range transfer case.[30][31][32]

Bodies edit

Cab edit

All of the 1940 designs had commercial type closed cabs with minor modifications. Variants had an open passenger roof so a ring for a .50 caliber machine gun could be mounted, during World War II approximately one in four trucks had a ring. In 1942, to simplify production and reduce shipping height, all manufacturers began to use military style open cabs. Studebaker returned to closed cabs after only 10,000 open cabs were built because the major user USSR preferred closed cabs. The post-war M35 and M135 were designed with open cabs and half-doors. Most military cabs could mount a machine gun ring. The M35 and M135 had removable hard tops available.[33][34][35]

 
M35 Cargo Truck

Cargo trucks edit

 
M342 Dump Truck

All series had a cargo model with a 12 ft (3.66 m) body on a long wheelbase. The 1940 designs had a 9 ft (2.74 m) prime mover type body on a short wheelbase, the M35 series had a 17 ft 5 in (5.31 m) body on a longer wheelbase (178 in).

All models had removable sideboards and overhead bows for a tarpaulin over the cargo area. All except the extra long wheelbase M36 (214 in) had folding troop seats in the sideboards.

Late in World War II, to conserve steel, cargo bodies were made largely of wood, postwar the M35 and M135 series returned to steel.[36][37][38][39]

Dump trucks edit

All series had dump trucks on both short wheelbase (166 in) and long (178 in). The US6 also had side-dump trucks. The cab stone-shield could be removed on most to lower shipping height. They could be equipped with overhead bows, tarpaulin, and troop seats.[40][41][42][43]

 
M275 Tractor Truck

Semi-tractor trucks edit

The M-6H-6, M211, and M35 series had a semi-tractor on a short wheelbase (166 in), the M35 series also had a long tractor (178 in). GMC made a few tractors based on the CCKW 352[44] during World War II. Studebaker never built a 6x6 tractor but built a 6x4 model.

Semi-tractor/trailers have limited off-road performance, and are not rated for full off-road use. The M35 and M211 series fifth wheel load rating was 12,000 lb (5,400 kg) on road and 7,000 lb (3,200 kg) off-road. A 36,000 lb (16,000 kg) trailer could be towed on road and a 17,000 lb (7,700 kg) trailer off-road.[40][45][46][47]

 
M49 Tank Truck

Tank trucks edit

All series had fuel and/or water tank versions on long wheelbases. Capacities were 750 US gal (2,800 L) to 1,200 US gal (4,500 L) in 2 or 3 compartments, depending on the series and whether carrying gasoline, water, or other liquid. Most had pumps and some had heaters. Most World War II units could be fitted with bows and a tarpaulin to camouflage themselves as common cargo trucks.[34][35][48]

Van trucks edit

 
M109 Van Truck

The CCKW, M35, and M135 had a 12 ft (3.66 m) van model on a long wheelbase. These could be equipped for many different roles. The M35 also had a 17 ft (5.18 m) model with slide out sections on both sides. Van bodies were used for medical, communication, machine, repair, and other shops. They could have different sizes, window arrangements, and other special equipment. "Expansible" vans are used for communication equipment.[49][50]

Chassis-cabs edit

The GMC CCKW and M35 series had chassis-cabs in different wheelbases for specialty bodies. Maintenance, engineer, water purification, pole-setting, air compressors, fire fighting, and other equipment were also mounted on chassis cabs.[51][52][53][54]


See also edit


Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Originally, during World War II, categorized as a light-heavy truck.[1]
  2. ^ The term "six by six" must not be taken too literally—the vast majority of the 2+12-ton trucks had ten wheels—what is meant is three axles, with driving power being available to all six axle-ends.
  3. ^ The others being the bulldozer, the Landing Ship, Tank, the amphibious "Duck" truck, the jeep, and the C-47 airplane.[4]

Reference notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Hyde, Charles K. (2013). Arsenal of Democracy: The American Automobile Industry in World War II. Wayne State University Press. pp. 152–153. ISBN 9780814339527.
  2. ^ The American Automobile Industry in World War Two (2-1-2019)
  3. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2018-07-20. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  4. ^ Dwight D. Eisenhower (1948). Crusade in Europe. Doubleday (US)/Heinemann (UK). p. 163/164. ISBN 080185668X. OCLC 394251.
  5. ^ Crismon (2001), p. 8, 326-327, 329.
  6. ^ a b Ware (2014), p. 236, 238-239.
  7. ^ Crismon (1995), pp. 164–165.
  8. ^ Crismon (2001), pp. 327–334.
  9. ^ Doyle (2003), pp. 108, 122, 125.
  10. ^ Crismon (2001), pp. 335–338.
  11. ^ Doyle (2003), pp. 127–128, 156.
  12. ^ Crismon (2001), pp. 330–334.
  13. ^ Doyle (2003), pp. 105–121.
  14. ^ Hyde (2014), pp. 203–207.
  15. ^ Ware (2014), pp. 237–239.
  16. ^ TM 9-801 (1944).
  17. ^ Crismon (2001), pp. 328–329.
  18. ^ Doyle (2003), pp. 122–124.
  19. ^ Ware (2014), p. 111, 181.
  20. ^ Hyde (2014), pp. 65–67, 208–209.
  21. ^ TM 9-807 (1943).
  22. ^ Crismon (1995), pp. 164–165, 170, 178, 185, .
  23. ^ Crismon (2001), pp. 327–328.
  24. ^ Doyle (2003), pp. 125–127.
  25. ^ Hyde (2014), pp. 209.
  26. ^ Ware (2014), p. 236.
  27. ^ Crismon (2001), pp. 338–345.
  28. ^ Doyle (2003), pp. 127–155.
  29. ^ TM 9-2320-361-10 (1993).
  30. ^ Crismon (2001), pp. 336–337.
  31. ^ Doyle (2003), p. 156-160.
  32. ^ TM 9-819 (1951).
  33. ^ Doyle (2003), pp. 110, 122, 127, 158.
  34. ^ a b TM 9-500 (1953), pp. 21-83 to 21-90.
  35. ^ a b TM 9-2800 (1947), pp. 279–281.
  36. ^ Ware (2014), pp. 236, 238–329.
  37. ^ Doyle (2003).
  38. ^ TM 9-500 (1953), pp. 6–10.
  39. ^ TM 9-2800 (1947), pp. 266, 273–275.
  40. ^ a b Crismon (1995), pp. 185.
  41. ^ Doyle (2003), pp. 111–112, 124–125, 132–134, 158.
  42. ^ TM 9-500 (1953), pp. 21–69, 21–74.
  43. ^ TM 9-2800 (1947), pp. 271, 272.
  44. ^ "GMC CCKW Tractor at The G503 Album". Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  45. ^ Doyle (2003), pp. 124, 130–131, 159.
  46. ^ TM 9-807 (1943), pp. 11–12.
  47. ^ TM 9-500 (1953), pp. 21-90 to 21-95.
  48. ^ Doyle (2003), pp. 111–115, 124, 134, 137, 158–160.
  49. ^ Doyle (2003), pp. 117, 138–142, 159.
  50. ^ TM 9-500 (1953), pp. 21-113 to 21-117.
  51. ^ Doyle (2003), pp. 114–117, 142–153.
  52. ^ TM 9-500 (1953), pp. 21–19, 21–30.
  53. ^ TM 9-2800 (1947), pp. 218, 267–268.
  54. ^ TM 9-2800 (1953), pp. 225, 235, 236, 239, 240.

General references edit

  • Crismon, Frederick W. (1995). International Trucks. Motorbooks International. ISBN 0-76030069-0.
  • Crismon, Fred W (2001). US Military Wheeled Vehicles (3 ed.). Victory WW2. pp. 356–362. ISBN 0-970056-71-0.
  • Doyle, David (2003). (2 ed.). Krause. pp. 105–160. ISBN 0-87349-508-X. Archived from the original on 2018-01-15. Retrieved 2018-04-26.
  • Hyde, Charles K. (2014). Images from the Arsenal of Democracy. Wayne State Univ. pp. 203–207. ISBN 978-0-8143-3982-4.
  • Ware, Pat (2014). The Illustrated Guide to Military Vehicles. Anness. pp. 238–239. ISBN 978-1-78214-192-1.
  • TM 9-500 Data Sheets for Ordnance Type Material (PDF). US Dept. of the Army. 1962. pp. Sec. 21. Retrieved 23 Apr 2018.
  • TM 9-801 Truck, 2 1/2-ton 6x6 GMC CCKW-352 & 353 (PDF). US War Dept. 1944. pp. 13–14, 35–40. Retrieved 27 Sep 2019.
  • TM 9-807 2 1/2 ton 6x6 Truck and 2 1/2 to 5-ton 6x4 Truck (Studebaker Models US6 and US6x4) (PDF). US War Dept. 1943. Retrieved 27 Sep 2019.
  • TM 9-819 2 1/2 ton 6x6 Cargo truck M34 (and others) (PDF). US Dept. of the Army. 1952. Retrieved 27 Sep 2019.
  • TM 9-819A 2 1/2-ton 6x6 truck M135 (PDF). US Dept. of the Army. 1951. Retrieved 27 Sep 2019.
  • TM 9-2320-209-10-1 Operation, Installation, and Reference Data Operator Level 2 1/2-ton, 6x6, M44A1 and M44A2 Series Trucks (Multifuel) (PDF). US Dept. of the Army. 1989. Retrieved 15 Jul 2019.
  • TM 9-2320-361-10 Operator's Manual for 2 1/2-ton, 6x6, M44A2 Series Trucks (Multifuel) (PDF). US Dept. of the Army. 1988. Retrieved 15 Jul 2019.
  • TM 9-2800 Military Vehicles (PDF). US Dept. of the Army. 1947. Retrieved 15 Jul 2019.
  • TM 9-2800 Military Vehicles (PDF). US Depts. of the Army. 1953. pp. 222–242. Retrieved 24 Apr 2018.

External links edit

  • US Army Technical Manuals at Jatonkam
  • US Army Technical Manuals at Liberated Manuals.com
  • US Army Technical Manuals at NSN Lookup[permanent dead link]

truck, truck, standard, class, medium, duty, trucks, designed, beginning, world, armed, forces, service, over, half, century, from, 1940, into, 1990s, also, frequently, known, deuce, half, just, deuce, this, nickname, popularized, post, wwii, most, likely, vie. The 2 1 2 ton 6 6 truck was a standard class of medium duty trucks designed at the beginning of World War II for the US Armed Forces in service for over half a century from 1940 into the 1990s nb 1 Also frequently known as the deuce and a half or just deuce this nickname was popularized post WWII most likely in the Vietnam war era 2 The basic cargo versions were designed to transport a cargo load of nominally 2 1 2 short tons 5 000 lb 2 300 kg over all terrain in all weather The 2 1 2 ton trucks were used ubiquitously in World War II and continued to be the U S standard medium duty truck class after the war including wide usage in the Korean and Vietnam Wars as well as the first Gulf War A Red Ball Express truck gets stuck in the mud during World War II 1944 1971 AM General M35A2 with winch and camouflage cargo cover Originally five different designs were standardized by the U S two were also standardized by Canada During World War II the most important model for the U S Army was the GMC CCKW or Jimmy with over 560 000 units built Another 200 000 deuces were Studebaker and REO US6 built primarily for Lend Lease export mostly to the Soviet Union and many others have been exported to smaller militaries In addition to the 6x6 trucks a significant minority of these trucks were also built minus the front wheel drive as 6x4 trucks nb 2 The nickname Jimmy a phonetical diminutive of GMC could be applied to both their 6x6 and 6x4 units After World War II the M35 series truck originally developed by REO became the standard 2 1 2 ton truck First fielded in the 1950s the M35 family became one of the most successful and long lived series of trucks ever deployed by the U S military They were used in Vietnam and continued to be used with various modifications into the late 1990s 3 In 1991 the U S military began replacing the 2 1 2 ton ten wheeled 6x6 and 6x4 trucks that were originally classified as light heavy in WW II and medium duty later in their service life with a significantly different design the four wheeled 4x4 cab over engine light medium but equally 2 1 2 ton rated LMTV variants of the Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles FMTV Of the almost 2 4 million trucks that the U S Army bought between 1939 and December 1945 across all payload weight classes just over one third 812 000 were 2 1 2 ton trucks the vast majority of which over 675 000 units were six by six variants outnumbering the almost 650 000 World War II jeeps 1 A further 118 000 2 1 2 ton trucks were built as 6x4 driven units The 2 1 2 ton cargo truck was considered such a valuable piece of equipment that General Eisenhower wrote that most senior officers regarded it as one of the six most vital U S vehicles to win the war nb 3 It has been called the most important truck of World War II and the 6 6 became known as the workhorse of the army 1 According to Hyde 2013 Each of the three axles had its own differential so power could be applied to all six wheels on rough terrain and steep hills The front axle was typically disengaged on smooth highways where these workhorses often carried loads much above their rated capacity 1 Half a century after World War II the remanufactured 2 1 2 ton M35 trucks still met 95 percent of the performance requirements at 60 percent of the cost of a new FMTV vehicle 3 Contents 1 History 2 Designs 2 1 GMC CCKW 2 2 Studebaker US6 2 3 IHC M 5 6 2 4 REO M35 2 5 GMC M135 3 Bodies 3 1 Cab 3 2 Cargo trucks 3 3 Dump trucks 3 4 Semi tractor trucks 3 5 Tank trucks 3 6 Van trucks 3 7 Chassis cabs 4 See also 5 Footnotes 6 Reference notes 7 General references 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp U S Army vehicles on a road in Belgium 19 January 1945 In 1939 1940 the U S Army Ordnance Corps was developing a 2 1 2 ton 5 000 lbs 2 300 kg load rated 6 6 tactical cargo truck that could operate off road in all weather Dump semi tractor tanker and other bodies were also planned 5 6 Yellow Coach a GM company Studebaker International Harvester and REO Motor Car Company submitted designs all except REO s were accepted and in production by 1941 Yellow s CCKW became the Army standard International s M 5 6 became Navy and Marine Corps standard and Studebaker s US6 was built for export to allied countries REO built the Studebaker design 6 7 8 9 In the late 1940s the military needed a new standard truck Chrysler GMC REO and Studebaker submitted designs The REO design was standardized for all services as the M35 and continued standard until 1990 The GMC was classed as substitute standard M135 in the US but became standard in Canada 10 11 Designs editGMC CCKW edit nbsp GMC CCKW Main article GMC CCKW 2 1 2 ton 6x6 truck As the standard US Army design during World War II over 560 000 were built more than any other US vehicle except the Jeep By 1947 there were over 20 standardized bodies and many more special modifications Production began at Yellow Coach s Pontiac Michigan truck plant in 1941 and at Chevrolet s St Louis plant in 1942 In 1943 Yellow was renamed G M C leading to the popular nickname Jimmy Production ended in 1945 Early trucks had GM s standard closed cab from July 1943 military open cabs which were easier to build and lowered shipping height were used To conserve steel later cargo bodies were built largely of wood The C O E AFKWX 6x4 CCW and amphibious DUKW were mechanically virtually identical and were built next to CCKWs in both plants 12 13 14 15 16 Studebaker US6 edit nbsp Studebaker US6 Main article Studebaker US6 The US6 was very similar in layout to and shared some components with the CCKW Studebaker built over 195 000 at their South Bend Indiana plant between June 1941 and August 1945 REO built another 22 000 in 1944 1945 The majority were exported Lend Lease to the Soviet Union Early trucks used a commercial style closed cab in December 1942 an open military style cab entered production The Soviet Union preferred the closed cabs for their extreme weather so in March 1943 the open cabs were discontinued after only about 10 000 were built The Studebakers were very successful in the Soviet Union where they carried large loads on poor roads in extreme weather They were so successful that they were closely copied as the ZIS ZIL 151 and ZIL 157 family of trucks built in the USSR until 1966 and in China until 1986 17 18 19 20 21 IHC M 5 6 edit nbsp International M 5H 6 The International design began production at Ft Wayne Indiana in 1941 500 M 5 6s and 3 000 M 5 6x4s with a commercial K model cab were complete by 1942 and were exported to the Soviet Union The design then was upgraded with a larger engine tires military open cab and other improvements and standardized as the M 5H 6 for the US Navy and Marines The only 2 1 2 ton with locking differentials it had excellent off road performance More than 30 000 of all models were built between 1941 and 1945 22 23 24 25 26 REO M35 edit nbsp REO M35 Main article M35 2 1 2 ton cargo truck The standard post war 2 1 2 ton truck M35 was manufactured by REO Kaiser Jeep Curtis Wright Studebaker Studebaker Packard AM General and Bombardier Canada from 1950 until the late 1980s with remanufacture extending into FY1999 The M35 has had the widest range of bodies of any US truck citation needed The cab design itself became the military standard also used by 5 and 10 ton trucks First built with a gasoline engine in 1964 the multi fuel became standard In 1991 existing M35s began to be upgraded with diesel engines and automatic transmissions Canadian trucks had automatic transmissions as built 27 28 29 GMC M135 edit nbsp GMC M211 An evolution from their widely successful CCKW General Motors successor Deuce and a Half 2 1 2 ton M135 was classed as a substitute standard in the US Army after the REO M35 was standardized and thus was employed in much smaller numbers but the M135 was also widely used by the Canadian Army The six wheel M135 cargo personnel truck featured a 180 inch wheelbase with a single wheel rear tandem and 11 00x20 size tires necessitating a wheel well in the cargo bed for clearance The M211 was identical except it had a dual wheel tandem and smaller 9 00x20 tires Other dual tandem versions produced were the M217 fuel tanker M220 shop van and M222 water tanker plus the shorter M215 dump truck and M221 tractor with a 168 inch wheelbase The M135 was the only 2 1 2 ton truck of the era designed with an automatic transmission The transmission had 4 speeds and 2 ranges with a single range transfer case 30 31 32 Bodies editCab edit All of the 1940 designs had commercial type closed cabs with minor modifications Variants had an open passenger roof so a ring for a 50 caliber machine gun could be mounted during World War II approximately one in four trucks had a ring In 1942 to simplify production and reduce shipping height all manufacturers began to use military style open cabs Studebaker returned to closed cabs after only 10 000 open cabs were built because the major user USSR preferred closed cabs The post war M35 and M135 were designed with open cabs and half doors Most military cabs could mount a machine gun ring The M35 and M135 had removable hard tops available 33 34 35 nbsp M35 Cargo Truck Cargo trucks edit nbsp M342 Dump Truck All series had a cargo model with a 12 ft 3 66 m body on a long wheelbase The 1940 designs had a 9 ft 2 74 m prime mover type body on a short wheelbase the M35 series had a 17 ft 5 in 5 31 m body on a longer wheelbase 178 in All models had removable sideboards and overhead bows for a tarpaulin over the cargo area All except the extra long wheelbase M36 214 in had folding troop seats in the sideboards Late in World War II to conserve steel cargo bodies were made largely of wood postwar the M35 and M135 series returned to steel 36 37 38 39 Dump trucks edit All series had dump trucks on both short wheelbase 166 in and long 178 in The US6 also had side dump trucks The cab stone shield could be removed on most to lower shipping height They could be equipped with overhead bows tarpaulin and troop seats 40 41 42 43 nbsp M275 Tractor Truck Semi tractor trucks edit The M 6H 6 M211 and M35 series had a semi tractor on a short wheelbase 166 in the M35 series also had a long tractor 178 in GMC made a few tractors based on the CCKW 352 44 during World War II Studebaker never built a 6x6 tractor but built a 6x4 model Semi tractor trailers have limited off road performance and are not rated for full off road use The M35 and M211 series fifth wheel load rating was 12 000 lb 5 400 kg on road and 7 000 lb 3 200 kg off road A 36 000 lb 16 000 kg trailer could be towed on road and a 17 000 lb 7 700 kg trailer off road 40 45 46 47 nbsp M49 Tank Truck Tank trucks edit All series had fuel and or water tank versions on long wheelbases Capacities were 750 US gal 2 800 L to 1 200 US gal 4 500 L in 2 or 3 compartments depending on the series and whether carrying gasoline water or other liquid Most had pumps and some had heaters Most World War II units could be fitted with bows and a tarpaulin to camouflage themselves as common cargo trucks 34 35 48 Van trucks edit nbsp M109 Van Truck The CCKW M35 and M135 had a 12 ft 3 66 m van model on a long wheelbase These could be equipped for many different roles The M35 also had a 17 ft 5 18 m model with slide out sections on both sides Van bodies were used for medical communication machine repair and other shops They could have different sizes window arrangements and other special equipment Expansible vans are used for communication equipment 49 50 Chassis cabs edit The GMC CCKW and M35 series had chassis cabs in different wheelbases for specialty bodies Maintenance engineer water purification pole setting air compressors fire fighting and other equipment were also mounted on chassis cabs 51 52 53 54 See also editEinheits LKW der Wehrmacht Nazi Germany s standardized 2 ton 6x6 truck for WW II of which under 15 000 were madeFootnotes edit Originally during World War II categorized as a light heavy truck 1 The term six by six must not be taken too literally the vast majority of the 2 1 2 ton trucks had ten wheels what is meant is three axles with driving power being available to all six axle ends The others being the bulldozer the Landing Ship Tank the amphibious Duck truck the jeep and the C 47 airplane 4 Reference notes edit a b c d Hyde Charles K 2013 Arsenal of Democracy The American Automobile Industry in World War II Wayne State University Press pp 152 153 ISBN 9780814339527 The American Automobile Industry in World War Two 2 1 2019 a b M 35 Series 2 1 2 ton 6x6 Trucks G 742 Olive Drab Archived from the original on 2018 07 20 Retrieved 2018 07 20 Dwight D Eisenhower 1948 Crusade in Europe Doubleday US Heinemann UK p 163 164 ISBN 080185668X OCLC 394251 Crismon 2001 p 8 326 327 329 a b Ware 2014 p 236 238 239 Crismon 1995 pp 164 165 Crismon 2001 pp 327 334 Doyle 2003 pp 108 122 125 Crismon 2001 pp 335 338 Doyle 2003 pp 127 128 156 Crismon 2001 pp 330 334 Doyle 2003 pp 105 121 Hyde 2014 pp 203 207 Ware 2014 pp 237 239 TM 9 801 1944 Crismon 2001 pp 328 329 Doyle 2003 pp 122 124 Ware 2014 p 111 181 Hyde 2014 pp 65 67 208 209 TM 9 807 1943 Crismon 1995 pp 164 165 170 178 185 Crismon 2001 pp 327 328 Doyle 2003 pp 125 127 Hyde 2014 pp 209 Ware 2014 p 236 Crismon 2001 pp 338 345 Doyle 2003 pp 127 155 TM 9 2320 361 10 1993 Crismon 2001 pp 336 337 Doyle 2003 p 156 160 TM 9 819 1951 Doyle 2003 pp 110 122 127 158 a b TM 9 500 1953 pp 21 83 to 21 90 a b TM 9 2800 1947 pp 279 281 Ware 2014 pp 236 238 329 Doyle 2003 TM 9 500 1953 pp 6 10 TM 9 2800 1947 pp 266 273 275 a b Crismon 1995 pp 185 Doyle 2003 pp 111 112 124 125 132 134 158 TM 9 500 1953 pp 21 69 21 74 TM 9 2800 1947 pp 271 272 GMC CCKW Tractor at The G503 Album Retrieved 14 May 2018 Doyle 2003 pp 124 130 131 159 TM 9 807 1943 pp 11 12 TM 9 500 1953 pp 21 90 to 21 95 Doyle 2003 pp 111 115 124 134 137 158 160 Doyle 2003 pp 117 138 142 159 TM 9 500 1953 pp 21 113 to 21 117 Doyle 2003 pp 114 117 142 153 TM 9 500 1953 pp 21 19 21 30 TM 9 2800 1947 pp 218 267 268 TM 9 2800 1953 pp 225 235 236 239 240 General references editCrismon Frederick W 1995 International Trucks Motorbooks International ISBN 0 76030069 0 Crismon Fred W 2001 US Military Wheeled Vehicles 3 ed Victory WW2 pp 356 362 ISBN 0 970056 71 0 Doyle David 2003 Standard Catalog of U S Military Vehicles 2 ed Krause pp 105 160 ISBN 0 87349 508 X Archived from the original on 2018 01 15 Retrieved 2018 04 26 Hyde Charles K 2014 Images from the Arsenal of Democracy Wayne State Univ pp 203 207 ISBN 978 0 8143 3982 4 Ware Pat 2014 The Illustrated Guide to Military Vehicles Anness pp 238 239 ISBN 978 1 78214 192 1 TM 9 500 Data Sheets for Ordnance Type Material PDF US Dept of the Army 1962 pp Sec 21 Retrieved 23 Apr 2018 TM 9 801 Truck 2 1 2 ton 6x6 GMC CCKW 352 amp 353 PDF US War Dept 1944 pp 13 14 35 40 Retrieved 27 Sep 2019 TM 9 807 2 1 2 ton 6x6 Truck and 2 1 2 to 5 ton 6x4 Truck Studebaker Models US6 and US6x4 PDF US War Dept 1943 Retrieved 27 Sep 2019 TM 9 819 2 1 2 ton 6x6 Cargo truck M34 and others PDF US Dept of the Army 1952 Retrieved 27 Sep 2019 TM 9 819A 2 1 2 ton 6x6 truck M135 PDF US Dept of the Army 1951 Retrieved 27 Sep 2019 TM 9 2320 209 10 1 Operation Installation and Reference Data Operator Level 2 1 2 ton 6x6 M44A1 and M44A2 Series Trucks Multifuel PDF US Dept of the Army 1989 Retrieved 15 Jul 2019 TM 9 2320 361 10 Operator s Manual for 2 1 2 ton 6x6 M44A2 Series Trucks Multifuel PDF US Dept of the Army 1988 Retrieved 15 Jul 2019 TM 9 2800 Military Vehicles PDF US Dept of the Army 1947 Retrieved 15 Jul 2019 TM 9 2800 Military Vehicles PDF US Depts of the Army 1953 pp 222 242 Retrieved 24 Apr 2018 External links editUS Army Technical Manuals at Jatonkam US Army Technical Manuals at Liberated Manuals com US Army Technical Manuals at NSN Lookup permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2 ton 6 6 truck amp oldid 1182662916, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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