Driving only front axles or front two axles with rubber tracks?

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Thread: Driving only front axles or front two axles with rubber tracks?

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    Wasilla, AK
    Posts
    923
    corner tires are critical for driving your track. With a rear tire (or worse yet the back 2 tires) disabled. You?ll slip inside and fail to drive track in higher load scenarios. Yes track tension will help, but tracks that are overly tight suffer more damage to the tracks themselves, hinges, corner bearing lifespan, tweaked frames, and broken axle flanges. Being as the inside of the track is smooth, you?d have to have that thing bow-string tight and then some to get it to drive reliably. I?d be worried big time about the front axle and chain. It would stretch quickly , begin drooping into the face of front sprocket and binding under heavy load maneuvers. Lifespan on the front chain would be pretty bad I think.
    Unfortunately your rubber track has a high slip load under the middle tires. Just gotta index tires properly. Other tracks have a significantly lower slip load under the middle tires.

  2. #12
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Location
    shenendoah valley,va.
    Posts
    2,673
    always good info ... thanks buzz , jboy

  3. #13
    Quote Originally Posted by Avenger Bob View Post
    Interesting, that’s the solution to wind-up (removing the chains to the back axle) that Argo recommends. Should be worth a try.
    I have ran the rubber tracks for near twenty years in snow only and had good luck with tires indexed and the center tires reversed and air pressure set as per argo spec and no issue once in a while thru the winter I knock back the adjusters a notch or two and let them reset driving without the full complement of tires what if you get a flat on your drive tire you are walking I have had flats and drove out cautiously and got back home everytime.NCT

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