All the photos in the trolley tug thread were deleted in the great photo bucket ransom debacle. I do have them though and the key ones (and some others) are here.
I built the trolley tug with its owner. we started building it 19 years ago. It's still around, it's now owned by a young member of the Vic club and is now camo. It's not registered.
It didn't achieve what I'd call "mind blowing" flex but more importantly, many of the finer details weren't properly resolved and they compromised the car. Some of this is because we don't know better and some is because we build it much more quickly than a "full" build.
It was refined a bit when it was resprayed grey but the major compromises were still there.
In contrast GregC's car was built though the same period but much more work was put in to remove compromises. However, they're both products of their time and I wouldn't build a car like either of them now.
Here they are side by side in 2005 with the chassis work on GregC's car complete and the trolley tug about to be started.

Here were the principle issues. I'll separate out those that are shared wth both cars and those that were unique to the trolley tug.
Both cars were RUF on derated OME leaves No issue there.
Both were set up on OME N76 shocks.The shocks are a compromise in themselves. We chose them because they're long and very soft. The problem is they're too long (about 11" travel) and that means the springs can get forced into overextension which fans the packs apart and makes them easy to damage. Also, the length means they don't fit under the floor in the rear and are very hard to build mounts for.
Both cars were built with 50mm bumpstop spacers and 50mm body lifts. This was seen as the only feasible way to run 35" tyres. This means the cars have to sit taller than ideal. GregC has done some work to lower his car as much as possible by cutting down the spacers in the front.
The chassis extension on both cars was too long. this put the shackle too vertical which added more ride height. I think we did this so stock shackles could be used but it was 20 years ago so of course we ran long shackles too.
On the trolley tug we didn't inboard the front springs. This compromised steering lock heavily and hurt roll stiffness. To try and rectify the steering lock issue, we ran heavily offset rims which pushed the track width out too far and made the car a pain - steering load and kickback were heavy and the car didn't fit where narrower sierra's could fit. It also never had power steering.
It was later converted to G16B Baleno and three speed auto (this was when it was grey). Michael, the owner is a freakishly talented driver and the car performed very well for its time but it was a bit of a bear to manage for some of the reasons I've explained.
Much later we converted the rear to radius arms and a full float axle to get rid of axle wrap and hopping which was breaking axles (another problem with a very big heavy tyre on a SWB with soft leaves) but the car only did a couple of trips like that before the rego lapsed and It was laid up for many years.
For reference, it had the same travel as GregC's car, just in some photos it looks more dramatic because it had/has no front bar

When first set up

Look how much ride height it has. Madness.
In contrast, here's Greg's car with the springs underslung. It's much cleaner but you can see the shackle angle is way too much and the extension could have been much smaller.



With the G16B conversion and auto. It was basically "complete" at this point and did quite a lot of trips.
This might be the photo you're referring to:

This was on it's first trip. I agree it looks like it has loads of flex here but it's a little it of a trick of the angle the photo was taken on.
Here's Gregc's car flexing similarly.

For reference, here is a more recent photo of GregC's car on 35X10 KR2's. he's worked quite hard to get it lower working within the constraints of the original build, but it now has very little compression travel which hurts performance at speed.

Don't get me wrong, the trolley tug was an effective and fun car, but twenty years of development means it's a long way from state of the art now.