#1
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Whoz You tube?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d048EOCGqDQ
Note i'm in the jeep on the passenger side, to hot and muggy to operate the carrier |
#2
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If you listen you can here the tracks hitting the home made side skirts, that why they were flanged outwards so this would not happen. it only makes sense.
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#3
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Tracks Hitting
It Happens on anything but flat ground nothing you can do about it.
Jeff |
#4
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Thats why you need a LP2 Carrier, no track slap
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#5
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So it happens All the time , Well I never new that , Cheers!
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#6
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The previous owner of my carrier bolted a strip of tire tread under each fender to minimize the noise of the track slap...
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#7
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GOOD IDEA, I think I may do this, Gives me sumthing to do in the fall, Thanks BM
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#8
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Using a plank of hardwood might be a better idea? This will let the track glide along. Rubber will be "grabbed" by the track and may be torn off.
Cheers,
__________________
Marc van Aalderen Daimler Dingo Mk1B 1941 Daimler Armoured Car Mk1 1943 Daimler Ferret Mk1/1 1959 Ford Universal Carrier No2 MkII* 1944 Ford GPW British Airborne 1944 Lightweight 10 Cwt Trailer SS Cars Ltd 1944 Anti-Tank Gun 6 Pdr 7 Cwt MkII 1942 Daf Trailer YAA602 1954 Daf Trailer AT16-24-1NL 1977 Daf 2100Turbo 1982 |
#9
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It is tread cut off of a worn tire...so rather "hard" rubber and the slight convex shape actually works quite well, and the track slides along very smoothly, even with the studs welded on my one set of track.
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