Basically anything that goes from soft line to hard line is the unobtanium fittings.
Yup. AND, there is a bunch of stuff not attached to the bed that needs to be there for the crane/bed mounted stuff to work. Crane/wrecker hydraulic pump, the air assisted governor/carburetor that work in unison to make the crane part work along with the plumbing, like a variable speed governor. The de-clutching hardware, linkage off of the passenger side of the clutch cross shaft, rotopack plumbing and hardware. IIRC, the rear winch takes totally different stuff too. There is alot going on in the M62 that isn't, ASFIK, there in the post M39 stuff.
I have seen pics of what he has. Most of the wrecker body stuff is there, but, the chassis has a ton of stuff that the M54 based truck doesn't have.
I do not know if the MACK has the capability of going from road to ASG/RSV, what ever they labeled it, for an all speed governor, meaning that if the throttle was set to 1800 RPM in the cab, the pump would hold the speed and just increase power output. The original Holley and the replacement Zenith had the provisions, air actuated governor off of the hydraulic pump governor, to regulate the governor at the carb to maintain a steady RPM and increase fuel no matter the set rpm. Think of it this way, no load engine RPM set at 1800 in the cab via the manual throttle cable. When the rear controls are engaged, there is another governor mounted to the rear hydraulic pump that when the load is increased via the hydraulics, the lower governor increases the airflow to the upper carb mounted governor and tries to keep the cab set RPM as close to where it was set without moving the throttle plate set by the upper throttle cable. 1940's technology. Today, drive by wire stuff and no moving parts.
I am by no means an expert on one of these, but, I have been elbows deep in one. I am more than happy to help out, take up close pics, whatever, to help get, hopefully, his project working.
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GM-M1008, let me know how I can help out.