as long as the mog is serviced at the correct intervals, they a very reliable, in my opinion more reliable than a landrover, think of a landrover, its a pressed axle, generally 10 splines?, straight half shafts. a unimog 1300l has a 3 piece axle, i believe around 20 splines off the top of my head, tapered half shafts, the unimog has to be strong in the axles especially, because it has difflocks, there's a reason land rover have never fitted difflocks as an option from the factory

when he was younger my dad was a complete land rover nutter, he was constantly fitting different engines in them, flipping the axles, and moddifying them, then he got a unimog... he now has 6 unimogs and no land rovers

people look at the unimog and get scared off, flexible chassis, portal axles, diff locks, torque tubes, their first impression is that it will be too complicated, but when you look at a mog in the flesh, the principal is in fact simple, and you also get a true representation of the build quality, for example the chassis on a mog is 9mm thick.
regarding the pod, its fitted to a u900 406, pods for a mog of this size are just rare in general, when we took it over to germany there were a lot of people interested in it cos its not often you see them fitted to this size chassis. its made using the rear body of a Hagland BV, we cut the bottom out completely and modified it to fit to the spider frame. the worst part of the conversion was making the cupboards, not a flat face on it!
