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Help my Mudd-Ox sunk!

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  • izza753
    replied
    Ouch!! Thanks i really needed that!

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  • kghills
    replied
    Originally posted by riotwarrior View Post
    TY

    Look forward to more info...any idea on width/rim size?
    The baby Vendettas will be 21x11x9. Hoosier has fallen a couple weeks behind with the weather I guess but you should expect to see them in 3 months. I usually try to snap some spy photos when I can.

    Keith.

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  • riotwarrior
    replied
    Originally posted by kghills View Post
    21" Vendettas will be available in a couple months from Mudd-Ox.

    Keith.
    TY

    Look forward to more info...any idea on width/rim size?

    Leave a comment:


  • kghills
    replied
    21" Vendettas will be available in a couple months from Mudd-Ox.

    Keith.

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  • riotwarrior
    replied
    wonder if they come in 22's as that's as tall as I can fit...

    would be nice!

    That machine sounds sweet...and those tyres are great!

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  • Noel Woods
    replied
    I've got to say they do look impressive, nice soft compound with plenty of give. Maybe they will hold the gumbo long enough to enhance adhesion. Would like to try a set just to report how they perform.

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  • akexpress
    replied
    Just imagine what it will do with the new 16" wide tire that goes into production next week!

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  • mudbug3
    replied
    Kmac

    Matt's new wider and deeper Mudd-ox tub and with Matt's new 26 x14 inch swimmer tires, is what you need. This would also lower your ground weight ( PSI ) on the soft ground as well. Matt's new 26" inch tire swims really well too! In a pond, a diesel Mudd-Ox, with the deeper and wider tub swam just about even with an amphib that weighed 1/3 of the weight of the diesel Mudd-ox. That's impressive! Both machines had Matt's 26x14 swimmer tires on them.

    Last edited by mudbug3; 02-12-2014, 05:32 PM.

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  • amphibious drew
    replied
    Originally posted by izza753 View Post
    I really feel for you dude!! I just couldn't believe what I was reading!! OMG! Im buying one regardless and would sure like to buy your cab!!?
    The operator took the Mudd-Ox into the ocean during a hurricane. Obviously no AATV is designed to handle the type of waves present during a big storm. I would suggest talking to Matt and just buying a can from him for your new Ox as this all happened out of the country and shipping would be a deal killer. Good choice deciding to get one though. They are really well built machines that are capable of doing things no other aatv in the market today can do. Great counter rotation and unlimited control make them truly an amazing machine.

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  • izza753
    replied
    I really feel for you dude!! I just couldn't believe what I was reading!! OMG! Im buying one regardless and would sure like to buy your cab!!?

    Leave a comment:


  • kmac
    replied
    Sorry mudbug, you got me started on this..final points..we can't send anything back to be repaired because we are not in the US, so it has be repaired locally. I was afraid of the hyratrek, because the props were linked to the hydrostatic system. I use to wonder if something goes wrong with the system, both the wheels and the props won't work. With the outboard on the ox, if the hydrostatic system goes, at least i can tow it using the second ox to the river and power down the river to point where i can recover the thing. And if the outboard goes, i can just tread down river, very slowly. So the two means of propulsion are separate, and i can use either as a backup, plus i got extra money to buy a back up atv (i had a nightmare about having to abandon an atv in the middle of no where because it broke down, that is why i tried to get money for two units). But believe me when i tell you i am very thorough. It took a year of research and hours watching videos online to come to a decision. If i had gotten the wider tub that i had asked for, this post might not have been necessary, because i realized that the ox would need to float better before i bought it...

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  • kmac
    replied
    Originally posted by mudbug3 View Post
    Kmac

    I talked to the Mud Ox dealer in Canada when I had a Mudd-Ox ,and this dealer has leased out lots of Mudd-Ox machines and about 6 Hydratrek machines. I asked him which machine has proven to be move reliable ,and he told me he preferred the Mudd-Ox because it has proven to be less costly to maintain when compared the Hydratrek's. He has had Hdratrek's sent back to have wheel motors that replaced that failed. He has had to repair punctured aluminum tubs on the Hydratreks.
    Wow, ok...well that confirms what I said. Even if a machine is more capable, the OX is very, very, easy to repair and modify. So the ox does have an edge..I can image if something went wrong with the tracks of the MM, how easy will that be to repair out in the middle of nowhere? The tracks of the ox came off and we were still able to drive it through soft mud with the tires. We were able to drive the ox all the way back to a point where we could off load our stuff. The tires eventually became stuck so the next day, we just threw two pieces of ply boards in front of it, and kept rotating the ply boards in front of the ox, until we were on firm ground and able to throw the tracks back on. Can the MM drive without the tracks in the mud? I can't image what would happen if those large trackless things got wedged in the mud, similar to what happened with the tires. We just dug in front of the tires and wedged the piece of board under the tires, and presto.. And will the MM be too heavy for pieces of ply board that can be carried by someone to the point where the tracks failed? Can it grip the ply boards and move with the boards under it without the tracks? That's why i said it's a tough question to answer. What i know now is that capability is only part of the equation, maintenance and ease of repair out in the middle of no where is possibly more important. I don't have a field crew, it's just two of us, or sometimes one person. So if anything goes wrong i have to sort it out and if i can fix most things on the ox by myself or isolate problems, anyone can. So in terms of capability, all we do is scout for ideal places to drive, if we run into the soft mud we just try to find another way around it...We realise that with careful planning and manoeuvring, we can get to most places, we don't need to drive through the rough stuff.

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  • mudbug3
    replied
    Kmac

    I talked to the Mud Ox dealer in Canada when I had a Mudd-Ox ,and this dealer has leased out lots of Mudd-Ox machines and about 6 Hydratrek machines. I asked him which machine has proven to be move reliable ,and he told me he preferred the Mudd-Ox because it has proven to be less costly to maintain when compared the Hydratrek's. He has had Hdratrek's sent back to have wheel motors that replaced that failed. He has had to repair punctured aluminum tubs on the Hydratreks.

    Leave a comment:


  • kmac
    replied
    I really don't know. I would still have to solve an important problem..the 1 mph on water would not be enough. I have to travel up the river. That is why the only machine i would have considered outside the Ox if i had the cash was the hydra trek, because it was self propelled on water. I pitched an idea to Matt and he said he could set it up, i.e. putting on an outboard that can be steered from the front of the ATV. He was the only one willing to set it up and test it, that's why i eventually decided to go with the Ox.
    Also the weight is an issue. The 3800 pounds for the smallest MM seems a tad bit too heavy. The terrain is very very soft in some places, unusually soft. Some sites have a thin layer of water with nothing but soft mud/peat below it. That is the stuff that sucks in the ox, and the stuff i have to avoid. If i hit a patch by accident, the only thing i can do is to come out and try to winch it out. The more the tracks are used, they act like excavators, digging the ox in deeper. Also, some of these holes are mud filled bottomless holes and the pontoon thing i set up has actually saved the ox from turning over or sinking too deep into these holes. Knowing what i know now, it would take an exceptional machine to drive through some places. We made up a way to describe some parts of the marsh land.. the treaterosity factor. If the factor is high, nothing much can go through if any thing at all. Also the banks are very steep in most places, so nothing with tracks below water line can climb on land; we'll have to use a winch. In most cases we just have a small tree to attach the winch to. So again weight is important. The pullpal would also fail, if the machine is too heavy, because in most cases there is nothing to anchor it to.
    Also footprint. The Mash master leaves a mess behind it, in some of the softer stuff, the Ox doesn't. This is important because we don't want to mess up the environment too much.
    And ease of repair. The Ox (outside of the hydrostatic system which i do not know if we will be able to repair) is a very, very simple machine, and outside of the electrical problems, i can fix every mechanical issue myself, and i'm not mechanic or car nut. Plus we have an automotive electrician who can fix any electrical gremlin on the Ox.
    That is why our funders would not provide the cash needed to pay for a MM or Hyratrek. They are not sure if they can perform that much better to justify the price. They would rather pay the price for an ox, so if it doesn't work, that is an acceptable risk. If both cost the same as the price of an ox, i'd have to go see both in action, and dig through it's mechanical parts. More than likely I'd have to add an outboard to the MM...so the ox still seems reasonable (considering everything i said before about weight etc). But to be honest as i said before the hyratrek is the only machine with all that i'd need (except the weight). It is the only machine i would consider if the price was right...

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  • mudbug3
    replied
    Kmac


    I can understand why buying the two Mud Ox 8x8's worked out better for you, but, if the price of these two machines were the same, could you have used an amphibious machine like the Marsh Master in the places that you need to go?

    Leave a comment:

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