doobin
Well-known member
Interested in thoughts on this.
I need to put steels on the 86c. However, due to the side mounted angle dozer ram blades I cannot have anythign extra over the standard 450s on the inside side. Make sense?
So if I bought 600 steel pads and cut one side down I'd have a split of 225/300 inner/outer, for a total of 525 total width.
If I go with 800 pads and do the same, this gives me 225/400 inner/outer, for a total of 625 total width.
The elephant in the room here is the extra wear on components. I have to switch to steels, and given the amount of sinkage I've experienced with rubber tracks I feel I also have to up the width a touch, although I appreciate that steels will be a bit less sinky than rubbers anyway.
What do the learned collective think? Could wear be evened out by switching the tracks from side to side periodically? As with the E27, it'll probably go back onto rubbers for summer work, so I'm realistic in that I'll have to accept some accelerated wear on the steels like this.
I need to put steels on the 86c. However, due to the side mounted angle dozer ram blades I cannot have anythign extra over the standard 450s on the inside side. Make sense?
So if I bought 600 steel pads and cut one side down I'd have a split of 225/300 inner/outer, for a total of 525 total width.
If I go with 800 pads and do the same, this gives me 225/400 inner/outer, for a total of 625 total width.
The elephant in the room here is the extra wear on components. I have to switch to steels, and given the amount of sinkage I've experienced with rubber tracks I feel I also have to up the width a touch, although I appreciate that steels will be a bit less sinky than rubbers anyway.
What do the learned collective think? Could wear be evened out by switching the tracks from side to side periodically? As with the E27, it'll probably go back onto rubbers for summer work, so I'm realistic in that I'll have to accept some accelerated wear on the steels like this.