Tracks... Worth it or not?

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Thread: Tracks... Worth it or not?

  1. #21
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    Northern Manitoba, Canada, eh!
    Posts
    145
    Actually I believe it only applies to the rubber tracks, but you have to inflate all tires (off the unit) to 5psi and measure the circumfrence, then install them in the proper order. Alot of dealers skip this step as it is time consuming and I suspect is why some people have chain windup problems with the rubber tracks.
    09' ARGO Avenger 750 EFI
    With near every option Argo makes
    and a few they don't

  2. #22
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    High Level ,AB , Canada
    Posts
    369
    what this about proper order to prevent chain windup ?? tell us more
    He who has not cruised the back country in a 6x6 , has not lived life to it's fullest
    A Mans level of mechanical education directly corresponds to the level pain suffered while getting it

  3. #23
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Savannah, Georgia
    Posts
    1,817
    The Adair tracks change every thing that we currently think about tracks. Number one, they swim, not only do they swim but they swim better than tire, check the video

    http://www.youtube.com/user/ARGOAVEN.../0/Gm5XcFsESvUhttp://adairargosales.com/index.php?

    The second thing they do is turn and turn well without creating chain wind up, check the turning.

    http://www.youtube.com/user/ARGOAVEN.../1/uvYfzvF7WSs

    Not only do they do all these great things but Adair Argo is in the process of developing a set of these super tracks for snow. I will be testing some on these tracks on my New Argo 650 HD with the Admiral transmission. I will put them through the most awful swamp and mud conditions I can find and will post extensive video. The projected swim speed for my 650 is 4 MPH and I will have 12" of ground clearance.

    For more information go to the following link:


    Adair Argo Series 8 Tracks

  4. #24
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Tulsa, OK
    Posts
    1,725
    what this about proper order to prevent chain windup ?? tell us more

    Argo instructons place the different size tires in certain positions, someone may have the full instructions for you
    To Invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk. (Thomas Edison)

  5. #25
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Savannah, Georgia
    Posts
    1,817
    Roger, I can only tell you what I have been told and that this design is made to allow the tire to spin a little preventing the chain wind up that destroys sprockets and chains.

  6. #26
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Savannah, Georgia
    Posts
    1,817
    IMG00026-20101001-1117.jpgIMG00028-20101001-1121.jpgFor those of you who are still doubters about the Adair tracks ability to go through the snow, please look at the following pictures and become a believer! What are your questions?

  7. #27
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    Northern Ontario
    Posts
    5
    Quote Originally Posted by chinook View Post
    I went through a set of chain tensionor last year, but learned to zip tie them down.
    more details on this please

  8. #28
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    Northern Manitoba, Canada, eh!
    Posts
    145
    Argo states that with rubber tracks (on my Avenger 8x8) you need to measure the size of each tire at 5 psi (circumfrence off the vehicle) I spoke to Argo themselves and was told that most tires (These are the 25" Argo tires) will be between 78" - 80" he told me if any are OVER 82" to call him back and he would fix it. I assume he meant replace it.
    You then mark all the sizes and install them in this order
    smallest set - front axle
    2nd smallest - rear axle (#4)
    2nd largest - axle #3 (from the front)
    Largest - Axle #2 (which happens to be under the front seat passengers)
    you then install tires and tracks and inflate to this
    Front axle #1 -5 psi
    #2 axle - 7 psi
    #3 axle - 7 psi
    #4 axle - 6 psi
    you are basically adding to the 1" drop on the center axles by using air pressure, the result is that on hard surfaces you can spin around until you get dizzy as you are only on the center 2 wheels.

    6 wheeler (Frontier) sizing and pressure is as follows
    Front axle - Smallest tires - 5 psi
    2nd axle - Middle size tires - 5 psi
    Rear axle - Largest tires - 6 psi

    One more thing, proper track tension is 2-3" below properly inflated center tire or tires on 8x8's (with unit lifted off the ground) no tighter, also DO NOT add more air to stop tire spin in the tracks, the tires SHOULD spin once in a while under certain circumstances. This is what reduces the chain stress by allowing the tires to slip a bit.

    I have over 800 miles on my Avenger this summer already and I have had ZERO problems with chains and sprockets. I personally installed the tracks and ensured they were done the right way.

    I was skeptical of my dealer when he told me to remove my rear chains or I will have chain windup with the tracks. I couldn't find ANY reference to remove the chains in the installation manual, so I called ARGO direct and got the facts. Run all your chains but install the tracks properly. It has worked for me, as I am putting on the miles pretty fast and do not have much chain stretch at all, the highest adjuster is only on the 2nd notch.

    Please keep in mind that plastic tracks are completely different and I have no manuals or experience with them.

    Hope that is clear as mud, Ha, ha.
    Let me know if anyone want more info, I will do what I can.

    Cas
    Last edited by number1cas; 10-29-2010 at 08:15 PM. Reason: More info
    09' ARGO Avenger 750 EFI
    With near every option Argo makes
    and a few they don't

  9. #29
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    Northern Manitoba, Canada, eh!
    Posts
    145
    A quick update

    I now have 960 Miles in 7 months running the tracks, chains are almost ready to go to click 3 on the adjusters, but not quite. A couple more rides yet. Also want to mention that my friends Avenger is running without rear chains and we have found that it does not climb hills in the snow, the tires slip right away and I can drive up and over no problem. He is putting the chains back on.
    I expect at LEAST 2000 miles from these chains, they were on click 1 when it was new and all the initial stretch should be gone by now. Regular oiling seems to be working great, I think Argo has these rubber tracks figured out.

    Was just reading through this thread again and noticed all the comments about rubber tracks and swimming. They DO indeed swim, in water put your tranny in reverse and crank the throttle, you will swim forward. Put tranny in forward and nail it, you will swim backwards, it is slower than the tires alone, but will allow you to steer and cross small bodies of water and creeks. I would not try to cross large bodies of water (I tried !!) as it is too slow, but it WILL get you across trail obstacles so you can continue on your way. I usually just turn around and back into the water, then swim across, back onto shore spin around and off I go..... I have even towed another Avenger across a river (200 Yards +) with just my tracks. We hit the other side about 300 yards downstream but we crossed it !! Current is about 4-5 MPH in the middle.

    Hope this is helpfull.

    Cas
    Last edited by number1cas; 12-11-2010 at 04:39 AM. Reason: merged two consecutive posts.
    09' ARGO Avenger 750 EFI
    With near every option Argo makes
    and a few they don't

  10. #30
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Texas
    Posts
    2,161
    Quote Originally Posted by mightymaxIV View Post
    Attachment 5714Attachment 5715For those of you who are still doubters about the Adair tracks ability to go through the snow, please look at the following pictures and become a believer! What are your questions?
    Dan:
    I am with you on this issue. I don't own a set of these, but have observed them on several vehicles in the swamps of East Texas. My observations were that they pull in all kinds of slop, even the kind that will immediately bog a wheeled vehicle. They will even continue to propel the vehcile when the underbody is dragging (conditions that would high center a wheeled vehicle). I have not seen a single vehicle with the Adair tracks get stuck, but its possible with anything.
    We dont get much snow here in Texas, but common sense dictates that the same grousers that move you in mud will work in snow, especially since the floatation is still there with the tires. The full circumference rubber tracks may provide a slight advantage in snow.
    As far as chain wind up is concerned, that can happen on any machine. It can be avoided by maintaining correct chain deflection, and not over-tightening the chains, over inflating the tires, etc., an earlier remark was made pertaining to tire slippage. That was right on the mark. The tires need to slip a bit in the process, otherwise too much torque will transfer back if adhesion is great enough and cause "torque transfer" back to the chains and cause the wind up issue.

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