ahhh ,i saw those on a combine and we thought it was the bounceing , i bet it was the straw chaff comeing out that was dislodging it
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how do you tighten the front chains on an argo?
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Those Monstercraftsman things would work ok if you mounted it on the slack side, and never backed up. When you drive in reverse, the pull on the chain will over ride that spring and pull the chain straight, and all the slack will go to the other side and flop around.
I think what you need is a copy of the ODG Centaur tensioner, which is a HD version of the older argo double sided floating tensioner.To Invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk. (Thomas Edison)
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[ QUOTE ) ' When you drive in reverse, the pull on the chain will over ride that spring and pull the chain straight, and all the slack will go to the other side and flop around. '
Roger
I can understand your point, but you have no idea just how strong this torsion spring is. lol. You would need a crow bar for leverage to do what you said on this tensioner. I may be wrong, but I don,t think that when the chain tension is put on the chain tensioner side, its going to move this torsion spring that much. I guess we will see said the blind man. lol. If my idea don,t work, then the laugh will be on me. I talked to Monstercraftman about building a torsion spring tensioner like the one used on the Argo Centaur, and I was told on the phone that they could build one like this too.Last edited by mudbug3; 10-01-2010, 09:54 PM.
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Originally posted by plott hound View Postheres one for the doityourselfer[ATTACH=CONFIG]5689[/ATTACH]
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What do you mean "loose enough to move"Are you talking about so that the chains can move across the tension points? I would think that keeping your chains lubed well enough would allow for a little more tension without wear to the tensioner. Although restraining cables as you mentioned would keep 'em from "walking"
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