First, hope you didn’t take my comment about last thing you want is a turbine personally. It was directed at how poorly turbines do with respect to fuel consumption and how it gets worse the slower you run/turn it.
Now I used the term compression ratio because most people can relate to that. In actuality it is pressure ratio that is correct term, so let’s start with a turboshaft (turbine like in M1 tank) and say it has a pressure ratio of 10:1 at full power, at 50% RPM it will have a pressure ratio ~5:1, this results in a lowering of efficiency and with that higher fuel consumption.
Now I’m not a huge fan of Wiki but refer to link
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brake_specific_fuel_consumption and scroll down to table.
The aircraft turbo prop is a good example of what I was describing.
-aircraft engine at idle = 2390 g/(kW•h)
-aircraft engine at ground roll = 1270 g/(kW•h)
-aircraft engine @ 0.30 Pmax = 508 g/(kW•h)
-aircraft engine @ 0.70 Pmax = 328 g/(kW•h)
-aircraft engine at Pmax (100% RPM) =294 g/(kW•h)
The reason most people don’t talk about this, is turbomachinery (jet engine, turbo fan, turbo shaft) usually spends most of it’s time at high power levels in which it is working in efficiency sweet spot.
I’m going to switch to standard engineering for now (not metric).
0.70 lb/hp/hr = Turbo shaft (good modern design)
0.39 lb/hp/hr = Stratified combustion (good modern gas design)
0.32 lb/hp/hr = good modern diesel design
So let’s say you are on a flat/smooth surface and it takes 100HP to maintain 62 MPH (100 KPH), turbo shaft will consume 70 pounds of fuel, gas engine 39 pound and diesel 32 pounds in one hour. So regardless of drivetrain type you are burning twice the fuel (same fuel) for turbine vs. diesel.
Turbines have great power density and are very reliable, but a small application like 8x8 a diesel or gas engine would be more practical. Especially if truck was used as generator for people when not on the move (this is what several militaries have as a future goal).
Not sure if you want to get into drivetrain conversation, but there are also losses when going from generator-to-battery-to-electric motor.