With the arrival of winter, finally, I
think it is time to have a posting about what goes on here when there
is snow on the ground.
In the fall of 2010, we constructed a
couple miles of trails on the property. Our intentions of the trail
system are to have the ability to walking and trail run in the
spring, summer and fall and to snowshoe and cross country ski in
the winter. We originally skied the trails after packing them with
my 1972 Ski-Doo Olympique 340 snowmobile. Sarah had mentioned that
it would be really nice to have tracks to follow. This got me
thinking about how to build a track setter to be towed behind the
snowmobile. I researched a few sites with a general search of how to
build a track setter and this link was the most helpful.
http://www.marcusnyberg.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Tracksetter.pdf
Making the Track
Setter
This was constructed in a couple hours
using scrap lumber and the odd hardware I had laying around. I found
the dimensions for spacing the molds by searching online. I merely
substituted lumber for the metal. The molds for the tracks are waxed
with old scraped off ski wax that was on our ski waxing bench. This
seems to work well. Originally, it was designed for old weights from
a weight bench set to be affixed, but I soon realized I needed more
weight than I had. The weight also needed to be placed further back
on the track setter. A cement block was then added. I ended up
adding a 2x6 piece of lumber to either side after first building it.
It is pictured how it currently used.
If I were to do things differently, I
would have put a piece of flashing under the body of the track setter
to reduce the icing. I am thinking of adding some “wings” to to
front to pull in snow for track setting in low snow conditions. The
biggest problem I have been facing are the skegs. I made these out
of some scrap plywood and the front edges keep shattering when
hitting buried obstacles. I am trying to find some scrap metal plate
to remake them.
I eventually will build the goose neck
hitch pictured in the plans, I am still thinking of how to do this
without a welder. I have also seen plans on how to hook this to the
snowmobile by mounting it to a pivot point attached to the tunnel.
My goal is to build the hitch so it can be easily switched between
the track setter and the leveler I built (next blog).
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