AWD Charger!

Newport 66

Old Man with a Hat
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As seen on FaceBook...

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Probably would be cool on snow. Wonder if the track pads would be able to stop this car on pavement though. Neat concept.

Dave
 
Nothing new about this they have been around for sometime. Primarily designed to fit on pickups for remote areas providing more mobility. They usually end up destroying fenders from either coming apart or picking something up in the track and wedging between the fender and track. Also look closely at the front as you have limited clearance for steering. Looks neat but ends there. Most of them can be found in junk piles.
 
Nothing new about this they have been around for sometime. Primarily designed to fit on pickups for remote areas providing more mobility. They usually end up destroying fenders from either coming apart or picking something up in the track and wedging between the fender and track. Also look closely at the front as you have limited clearance for steering. Looks neat but ends there. Most of them can be found in junk piles.
Party pooper :poke:
 
that idea has been around for 100 years
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the jack stand makes me wonder if it is fake
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What do you think?... the first time he cuts the wheel those tracks are gonna take out either the fender behind or the year the bumper cover off in front. Depending which way he turns.
 
What do you think?... the first time he cuts the wheel those tracks are gonna take out either the fender behind or the year the bumper cover off in front. Depending which way he turns.
That's true, but the installation is definitely not finished, because they have to remove the bumper covers and trim them if they're going to use the track system. American Track makes a Dominator kit that can be used on most AWD platform vehicles. (Keyword is most.) Chances are the pictures are real, but they were likely taken in their shop during a mock up. I've seen them on Subarus, Nissan Rogues, Passats, etc.
 
I wonder if steering is accomplished like a cat or tank or skid loader, whereas the track(s) is stopped in the direction you want to turn?
 
I wonder if steering is accomplished like a cat or tank or skid loader, whereas the track(s) is stopped in the direction you want to turn?
No it's not. The assembly is just bolted on in place of the standard wheels, and traction and steering is still done the same way.

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Lots of variations and I am sure they are getting better. I worked for a drilling exploration company in Canada a few years ago as Canadian Equipment Manager. We had multiple sets of these prior to me starting and we tried them but eventually scrapped them all. The tracks wouldn’t hold up, they picked up rocks, sticks and chunks of mud at times. Even with lots of clearance they still tore up the trucks and were difficult to manoeuvre. In the end a track machine is meant for tracks and a rubber tire unit is meant for rubber tires that is the way they were designed.
 
Guess the tracks aren't "speed rated" as tires are? What might stopping distance be from 100mph? LOL
 
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