1993 AM General H1 Hummer, military-based M998 but now heavily customized as a civilian unit. This unit began life as a military vehicle and has since been upgraded with a variety of creature comforts, giving it a more refined civilian utilitarian feel such as full doors with power windows stereo and more. We just went over this truck originally pricing it As-is but we did take the time to put it through the shop validate a lot of items order hard to find parts and properly inspect this beast of a truck. The vehicle shows 6,000 original miles, which appear to be accurate based on documentation; however, it is equipped with a replacement diesel engine with less than 500 miles and one that is equipped with AC compressor. Optional wheel and tire packages are available. Currently, it sits on extremely custom, heavily offset 35x15.50x26 tires mounted on chrome 26x14 Hardcore wheels. It features hard doors, a hard top, power window conversion, an upgraded touchscreen stereo with multiple subwoofers in a custom enclosure, a actual dash with gauges, and a black wrap over what appears to be a dark charcoal paint finish underneath. Additional upgrades include LED lighting throughout. This H1 has a wild look, runs extremely well, and attracts a tremendous amount of attention. The wrap is older and beginning to peel in some areas, so it is not perfect; however, where it has been pulled back slightly, the underlying paint appears to be a clean, glossy dark charcoal. It also has very dark tinted windows, and the hard-to-find, expensive windshield glass is not cracked. Overall, this is a very cool and unique unit. Call with any questionspriced considerably lower than a true civilian H1, while offering most of the upgrades and off-road capability you would expect or want. This Vehicle only has a running time of 344 hours as well. Ac is not hooked up but appears it could be resonably easily truck has also just passed a Va inspection with new brakes and idler arm and alignment. This is a literal hot wheels toy looking vehicle what a conversation piece every day we pull it out of the building.